Temporary appropriation

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Temporary appropriation refers to the action in which a

sacralisation or worship. Authors stress two main factors that encourage the temporary appropriation phenomenon, on the one hand the cultural factor (also known as Synthetic psychological environment)[3] while on the other the configuration or design of the built environment. The former refers to the group of symbols, values, attitudes, skills, knowledge, meanings, communication ways, social structure and physical objects that make possible the life of a determinate society.[4] While the latter refers to human-made structures, features, and facilities viewed collectively as an environment in which people live and work.[5] Temporary appropriation is an example of Architectural Exaptation
in the urban environment.

Theoretical explanation

The term appropriation was firstly introduced by

urban landscape and their design is therefore strongly linked to the possibility of occurring activities related to the Temporary Appropriation. In other words, while appropriation is a broader term, its temporary variation refers more specifically to public spaces.[11][12] The accent in the latter has always been placed on the informality of this action ( for more details see Temporary appropriation and urban informality: Exploring the subtle distinction). Dr. Lara-Hernandez conceptualises temporary appropriation instead as a consequence of the necessity of adapting human needs to a city that deprives the population of reference points due to sudden and unexpected changes.[13] Additionally, it has been claimed that temporary appropriation plays a key role in enhancing urban resilience (see Temporary Appropriation in Cities: Human Spatialisation in Public Spaces and Community Resilience
).

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Graumann, Carl Friedrich (1976). "The Concept of Appropriation (Aneignung)And Modes of Appropriation of Space". Appropriation of Space. 6 (2).
  3. ^ Trollope-Kumar, Karen, Last, John M., "Encyclopedia of Public Health: Cultural Factors", 2002 [1]
  4. .
  5. ^ "Built Environment | Definition of Built Environment by Oxford Dictionary on Lexico.com also meaning of Built Environment". Lexico Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on October 29, 2020. Retrieved 24 August 2020.
  6. ^ Korosec-Serfaty, Paola (1976). Appropriation of Space: Proceedings of the Strasbourg Conference (1 ed.). Strasbourg: Louis Pasteur University. p. 655.
  7. ^ Graumann, Carl Friedrich (1976). "The Concept of Appropriation (Aneignung)And Modes of Appropriation of Space". Appropriation of Space. 6 (2).
  8. S2CID 18096395
    .
  9. ^ Pol, Enric (2002). Psicología y medio ambiente. Aspectos psicosociales, educativos y metodológicos. A Coruña: Asociación Galega de Estudios e Investigacion Psicosocial-Publiedisa. pp. 123–132.
  10. ^ Yory, Carlos Mario (2011). "El Concepto de Topofilia entendido como Teoría del Lugar" (PDF). Revista Barrio Taller: 1–17.
  11. , retrieved 2023-08-23
  12. .
  13. ^ Lara-Hernandez, Jose Antonio (2019). Temporary appropriation : theory and practice of the street. Portsmouth, UK: University of Portsmouth.