
Rights Of Passage: Sidewalks And The Regulation Of Public Flow Documents A Powerful And Under-researched Form Of Urban Governance That Focuses On Pedestrian Flow. This Logic, Which Nicholas Blomley Terms 'pedestrianism', Values Public Space Not In Terms Of Its Aesthetic Merits, Or Its Success In Promoting Public Citizenship And Democracy. Rather, The Function Of The Sidewalk Is Understood To Be The Promotion And Facilitation Of Pedestrian Flow And Circulation, Predicated On The Appropriate Arrangement Of People And Objects. This Remarkably Pervasive Yet Overlooked Logic Shapes The Ways In Which Public Space Is Regulated, Conceived Of, And Argued About. Rights Of Passage Shows How The Sidewalk Is Literally Produced, Encoded, Rendered Legible And Operational With Reference To A Dense Array Of Codes, Diagrams, Specifications, Academic And Professional Networks, Engineering Rubrics, Regulation And Case Law – All In The Name Of Unfettered Circulation.although A Powerful Form Of Governance, Pedestrianism Tends To Be Obscured By Grander And More Visible Forms Of Urban Regulation. The Rationality At Work Here May Appear Commonplace; But, Precisely Because It Is Uncontroversial, Pedestrianism Is Able To Operate Below The Academic And Political Radar. Complicating The Prevailing Tendency To Focus On The Socially Directive Nature Of Public Space Regulation, Blomley Reveals The Particular Ways In Which Pedestrianism Deactivates Rights-based Claims To Public Space.
How does the pervasive, often invisible logic of 'pedestrianism' regulate urban public space and suppress rights-based claims to the sidewalk? Nicholas K. Blomley, a professor of geography, investigates the technical and legal frameworks that prioritize the efficient flow of pedestrians over the democratic or social functions of public space. By examining engineering standards, municipal codes, and judicial precedents, the author argues that the modern sidewalk is constructed as a machine for circulation, effectively neutralizing political or social activity through the guise of neutral urban management.
What You Will Find
Scholars in urban geography and legal studies identify this work as a critical intervention in the study of public space regulation. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which effectively exposes the hidden political implications of seemingly mundane urban infrastructure.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Routledge
ISBN-10:
0415575613
ISBN-13:
9780203840405
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