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From placemaking to sustainability citizenship: An evolution in the understanding of community realised public spaces in Bogotá’s informal settlements

Beau Bradley Beza (School of Architecture and Built Environment, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia)
Jaime Hernández-Garcia (School of Architecture and Design, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Bogota, Colombia)

Journal of Place Management and Development

ISSN: 1753-8335

Article publication date: 1 May 2018

Issue publication date: 23 May 2018

636

Abstract

Purpose

Placemaking is an established practice and research field. It takes on a spatial dimension created through a socio-political process where value and meaning are assigned to settings. An emerging concept, sustainability citizenship relies on social actors creating sustainable urban settings by working, sometimes, “outside” formal planning; offering an evolutionary step in the creation and understanding of community realised places. The purpose of this paper is twofold: examine one of Bogotá, Colombia’s informal settlements to explore the placemaking/sustainability citizenship relationship, and use this exploration as a means to argue the appropriateness of sustainability citizenship when investigating/realising settings in Bogotá’s informal settlements.

Design/methodology/approach

To address the paper’s aim, books, journal articles and monographs related to citizen/community participation, placemaking, citizenship (in Latin America and conceptually) and sustainability citizenship were collected and critically reviewed. Identification of these documents was achieved through a literature review of the library database at Deakin University and Pontificia Universidad Javeriana and the co-authors of this paper contributing to and reviewing submissions to the 2016 Routledge publication, Sustainability Citizenship. Field observation and engagement with the citizenry living in the informal settlements of Bogotá, Colombia were conducted at various times in 2013, 2014 and 2017.

Findings

Sustainability citizenship and placemaking are linked through their “process-driven” approach to realising places and use of the citizenry to enact change. In Bogotá, Colombia’s informal settlement of Caracoli, public spaces are created outside formal planning processes through alternative path dependencies and the resourcefulness of its citizens. Sustainability citizenship, rather than placemaking, can work outside formal planning and manoeuvre around established path dependencies, which offers an evolutionary step in the creation and understanding of community realised places in the global south.

Originality/value

This paper provides insight into the use of placemaking when explaining the realisation process of Bogotá, Colombia’s informal settlements. The paper’s contents also explore the placemaking/sustainability citizenship relationship, which in terms of the latter is a new citizenry dimension that can be used to provide new insight into the realisation process of public spaces in Bogotá’s informal settlements.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

An earlier version of the Caracoli section of this paper was produced, by the authors of this piece, for the XXXIII International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) held in San Juan, Puerto Rico (27-30 May 2015). In the production of this paper, for the special edition of the Journal of Place Management and Development, the Caracoli section in this work has been substantially rewritten. However, in some instances, direct quotes from the LASA related paper have been used in this work and referenced accordingly (Beza and Hernández-Garcia, 2015).

Citation

Beza, B.B. and Hernández-Garcia, J. (2018), "From placemaking to sustainability citizenship: An evolution in the understanding of community realised public spaces in Bogotá’s informal settlements", Journal of Place Management and Development, Vol. 11 No. 2, pp. 192-207. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPMD-06-2017-0051

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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