The interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city Johannesburg

A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 2020 === This thesis examines how the history, design, management and use of public space relate to the interaction o...

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Main Author: Middelmann, Temba John Dawson
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10539/31224
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-312242021-05-24T05:08:13Z The interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city Johannesburg Middelmann, Temba John Dawson A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 2020 This thesis examines how the history, design, management and use of public space relate to the interaction of public space with spatial (in)justice, focussing on case studies of different public space typologies in inner-city Johannesburg. These cases - namely Gandhi Square, Constitution Hill and Pieter Roos Park - embody key and distinct models for public space management. The research contributes to understanding the changing nature and meaning of privately and publicly managed places regarding their interactions with spatial justice and injustice. While the emphasis in South Africa’s spatial justice discourse is largely focussed on inadequate, peripherally located housing, this PhD explores how these issues relate with and impact on central public places. The thesis thus demonstrates how broad spatial injustices influence particular sites and networks of public space, arguing that site-level management and use patterns play important roles in shaping public culture, which has further implications for those broader spatial injustices and attempts at resolving them. Lefebvre’s (1968) concept of the right to the city helps to explore the inherently political nature of public space, and how people’s rights are enabled or circumscribed in the ways the spaces are managed, used and contested. My analysis of the paradoxes of public space underpin arguments for a more nuanced and processual understanding of spatial justice that emphasises public space more strongly, based on a shift from understanding spatial justice through a necessitation of trade-offs to a more holistic approach. In line with this shift is a call for a more network-based, creative and collaborative approach to the production and management of public space CK2021 2021-05-12T08:45:54Z 2021-05-12T08:45:54Z 2020 Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10539/31224 en application/pdf application/pdf
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description A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 2020 === This thesis examines how the history, design, management and use of public space relate to the interaction of public space with spatial (in)justice, focussing on case studies of different public space typologies in inner-city Johannesburg. These cases - namely Gandhi Square, Constitution Hill and Pieter Roos Park - embody key and distinct models for public space management. The research contributes to understanding the changing nature and meaning of privately and publicly managed places regarding their interactions with spatial justice and injustice. While the emphasis in South Africa’s spatial justice discourse is largely focussed on inadequate, peripherally located housing, this PhD explores how these issues relate with and impact on central public places. The thesis thus demonstrates how broad spatial injustices influence particular sites and networks of public space, arguing that site-level management and use patterns play important roles in shaping public culture, which has further implications for those broader spatial injustices and attempts at resolving them. Lefebvre’s (1968) concept of the right to the city helps to explore the inherently political nature of public space, and how people’s rights are enabled or circumscribed in the ways the spaces are managed, used and contested. My analysis of the paradoxes of public space underpin arguments for a more nuanced and processual understanding of spatial justice that emphasises public space more strongly, based on a shift from understanding spatial justice through a necessitation of trade-offs to a more holistic approach. In line with this shift is a call for a more network-based, creative and collaborative approach to the production and management of public space === CK2021
author Middelmann, Temba John Dawson
spellingShingle Middelmann, Temba John Dawson
The interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city Johannesburg
author_facet Middelmann, Temba John Dawson
author_sort Middelmann, Temba John Dawson
title The interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city Johannesburg
title_short The interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city Johannesburg
title_full The interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city Johannesburg
title_fullStr The interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city Johannesburg
title_full_unstemmed The interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city Johannesburg
title_sort interactions between public spaces and spatial (in)justice: comparing case studies in inner-city johannesburg
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10539/31224
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