This paper is about the re-engineering of the public realm. Its purpose is to encourage balanced debate about the rising numbers of residential schemes in British and other European cities that supply collectively consumed neighbourhood goods and services exclusively to households within the 'gates'. It reviews the wider global trend towards gated developments and comments on the academic debates arising. It sets out reasons--offered as testable hypotheses--why we should expect to see many more gated developments in the future. Drawing on theories of collective consumption, the efficiency of gated communities is discussed. The polarisation of the private and public realms is re-interpreted and a third category defined--the 'club realm'. The...
The 2005 American Housing Survey reveals that 11% of residents on the west coast of the USA live in ...
This paper deals with the poorly researched concept of fenced settlements (housing policy), which wa...
Gated communities are normally presented in highly negative terms, based on the common assumption th...
International audienceThis paper examines the notion of gated communities and more generally, privat...
Gated residential developments, neighbourhoods to which public access is restricted, continue to gen...
This article reviews a range of arguments and some of the evidence on the emergence of gated communi...
This article examines the notion of gated communities and, more generally, privately governed urban ...
Gated residential developments, neighbourhoods to which public access is restricted, continue to gen...
The number of private gated developments continues to grow in Britain, in apparent contradiction to ...
Paper presented at the 5th International Conference of the Research Network Private Urban Governance...
2 This article reviews a range of arguments and some of the evidence on the emergence of gated commu...
Discussions about gated communities, shopping malls, and industrial parks-proprietary developments p...
This book presents a paradigm shift for gated communities research. Based on contemporary studies fr...
An outpouring of literature on privatisation of public and residential realms has been a hallmark of...
Discussions about gated communities, shopping malls, and industrial parks -- proprietary development...
The 2005 American Housing Survey reveals that 11% of residents on the west coast of the USA live in ...
This paper deals with the poorly researched concept of fenced settlements (housing policy), which wa...
Gated communities are normally presented in highly negative terms, based on the common assumption th...
International audienceThis paper examines the notion of gated communities and more generally, privat...
Gated residential developments, neighbourhoods to which public access is restricted, continue to gen...
This article reviews a range of arguments and some of the evidence on the emergence of gated communi...
This article examines the notion of gated communities and, more generally, privately governed urban ...
Gated residential developments, neighbourhoods to which public access is restricted, continue to gen...
The number of private gated developments continues to grow in Britain, in apparent contradiction to ...
Paper presented at the 5th International Conference of the Research Network Private Urban Governance...
2 This article reviews a range of arguments and some of the evidence on the emergence of gated commu...
Discussions about gated communities, shopping malls, and industrial parks-proprietary developments p...
This book presents a paradigm shift for gated communities research. Based on contemporary studies fr...
An outpouring of literature on privatisation of public and residential realms has been a hallmark of...
Discussions about gated communities, shopping malls, and industrial parks -- proprietary development...
The 2005 American Housing Survey reveals that 11% of residents on the west coast of the USA live in ...
This paper deals with the poorly researched concept of fenced settlements (housing policy), which wa...
Gated communities are normally presented in highly negative terms, based on the common assumption th...