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Finding Common Ground: The Importance of Place Attachment to Community Participation and Planning
1.3K
Citations
69
References
2006
Year
Community PerceptionEnvironmental PsychologyEducationEnvironmental PlanningPlace AttachmentSocial SciencesCommunity BuildingCommunity GeographyCommunity StudiesCommunity Health Sciences Community-engaged ResearchCivic EngagementCommunity Planning LiteratureCommunity EngagementUrban PlanningCommunity ParticipationCultureCommunity DevelopmentCommunity EnvironmentNatural EnvironmentsCommunity OrganizingSociologyCommunity PlanningHousing DesignCommon GroundCross-cultural Placemaking
The article links place attachment research with community planning, noting that while place attachment focuses on individual emotions, planning emphasizes participation, and that emotional bonds can motivate community improvement. The authors synthesize interdisciplinary literature to create a framework for understanding the psychological dimensions of people’s interactions with community. They propose an ecological model that integrates multiple environmental domains and analysis levels. The model accommodates place attachments and meaning alongside social and political aspects of community participation.
This article draws connections between the environmental and community psychology literature on place attachment and meaning with the theory, research, and practice of community participation and planning. Each area of inquiry has much to offer the other, yet few links have been made between them. Typically, literature on place attachment focuses on individual feelings and experiences and has not placed these bonds in the larger, sociopolitical context in which planners operate. Conversely, the community planning literature emphasizes participation and empowerment, but overlooks emotional connections to place. Yet these attachments can motivate cooperative efforts to improve one’s community. Literature across disciplines is examined and synthesized to develop a framework for understanding the psychological dimensions of people’s interactions with community. An ecological model is then proposed that integrates multiple environmental domains and analysis levels. This model can accommodate place attachments and meaning as well as social and political aspects of community participation.
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