This article makes the case for the situated orderliness of social discomfort as a cultural resource for social actors in mundane public interaction. It does this by describing instances in which Urban Park Rangers ‘walk in on’ incumbent interlopers partaking in expectedly private activities in public park space. While social discomfort is often conceptualised as internal, personal, and ‘belonging’ to individuals, in attending to its orderly features in interaction, it is produced and realised as a public phenomenon available to be seen, managed, navigated, and contested in an orderly (and ordinary) way. The balance of discomfort in interaction becomes a situated resource for the management of urban territories, and the ability to ‘walk in ...
Social access to urban parks is an understudied phenomenon encompassing the interplay between the ph...
The natural and built environment has been shown to affect its users in both psychological and physi...
Public spaces allow people to meet on ostensibly neutral ground, within the context of the whole com...
This article makes the case for the situated orderliness of social discomfort as a cultural resource...
This chapter engages with a growing interest from urban sociology, criminology and critical legal st...
This report is the result of an empirical investigation of everyday life in Victory Square, Vancouve...
Goffman’s concerns with social order, communication, and the demands of the self are perhaps best ex...
Situating itself in encounter and public space debates and borrowing from nonrepresentational theory...
This paper discusses the implications of the shifting cultural significance of public open space in ...
Green areas have been used for spending leisure time for people with various ethnic backgrounds. How...
This Major Research Paper examines how ideologies of nature are manipulated by local civic actors to...
International audienceExclusion from public spaces is often seen as being the result of revanchist u...
A much-celebrated feature of urbanity, is peaceful face-to-face interaction among diverse strangers ...
This project examines interactions and encounters in a public park in order to better understand how...
In urban sociology, there is little mention of park users compared to city people and street users, ...
Social access to urban parks is an understudied phenomenon encompassing the interplay between the ph...
The natural and built environment has been shown to affect its users in both psychological and physi...
Public spaces allow people to meet on ostensibly neutral ground, within the context of the whole com...
This article makes the case for the situated orderliness of social discomfort as a cultural resource...
This chapter engages with a growing interest from urban sociology, criminology and critical legal st...
This report is the result of an empirical investigation of everyday life in Victory Square, Vancouve...
Goffman’s concerns with social order, communication, and the demands of the self are perhaps best ex...
Situating itself in encounter and public space debates and borrowing from nonrepresentational theory...
This paper discusses the implications of the shifting cultural significance of public open space in ...
Green areas have been used for spending leisure time for people with various ethnic backgrounds. How...
This Major Research Paper examines how ideologies of nature are manipulated by local civic actors to...
International audienceExclusion from public spaces is often seen as being the result of revanchist u...
A much-celebrated feature of urbanity, is peaceful face-to-face interaction among diverse strangers ...
This project examines interactions and encounters in a public park in order to better understand how...
In urban sociology, there is little mention of park users compared to city people and street users, ...
Social access to urban parks is an understudied phenomenon encompassing the interplay between the ph...
The natural and built environment has been shown to affect its users in both psychological and physi...
Public spaces allow people to meet on ostensibly neutral ground, within the context of the whole com...