Conflicting rights to the city in New York's community gardens
In the mid-1990s, New York City initiated what would prove to be a long, highly visible struggle involving rights claims related to property, housing, and public space in the form of community gardens. The competing discourses of rights were part of a struggle over the kind of city that New York was...
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Veröffentlicht in: | GeoJournal 2002, Vol.58 (2/3), p.197-205 |
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description | In the mid-1990s, New York City initiated what would prove to be a long, highly visible struggle involving rights claims related to property, housing, and public space in the form of community gardens. The competing discourses of rights were part of a struggle over the kind of city that New York was to become, and more specifically, whether it would be one in which difference is accepted and in which access to the city and the public realm would be guaranteed. Using interviews with participants in the conflict over community gardens, we evaluate how the resolution to the gardens crisis, which in part occurred through the privatization of what are often taken to be public or community rights to land, transform not only the legal status of the gardens but also, potentially, their role as places where different 'publics' can both exercise their right to the city and solidify that right in the landscape. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1023/b:gejo.0000010839.59734.01 |
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subjects | Affordable housing Behavioral sciences City politics Civil rights Communities Community facility Community gardens Conflict Environment Flowers & plants Gardens Gardens & gardening Geography Housing Land claims Land trusts Land use Neighborhoods New York Privatization Property rights Public gardens Public space Public spaces Rights Studies U.S.A Urban planning Urban studies |
title | Conflicting rights to the city in New York's community gardens |
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