Publication | Closed Access
A Place to Call Home: Identification With Dwelling, Community, and Region
730
Citations
41
References
1993
Year
Place IdentityCommunity PerceptionSocial GeographyEducationSocial SciencesUrban SocietyHousingSocial IdentityUrban PlanningCape CodUrban GeographyCultureCommunity DevelopmentResidential DevelopmentCommunity EnvironmentSociologyAnthropologyCommunity IdentityUrban SpaceUrban Life
The concept of place identity has been the subject of a number of empirical studies in a variety of disciplines, but there have been relatively few attempts to integrate this literature into a more general theory of identity and environment. Such endeavors have been limited by a lack of studies that simultaneously examine identification with places of different scale. This article addresses this critical omission by analyzing how residents of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, develop a sense of home with respect to dwelling, community, and region. Our results suggest that different social and environmental factors discriminate identification across place loci: specifically, that demographic qualities of residents and interpretive residential affiliations are critical to dwelling identity; that social participation in the local community is essential for community identity; and that patterns of intercommunity spatial activity promote a regional identity. Such understandings, we propose, are important to constructing an integrated theory of place identity, one sensitive to the complex ways the self is situated in the social-spatial environment.
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