{"title":"Cagliari’s urban landscape: a commons?","authors":"Marcello G Tanca","doi":"10.4458/6964-07","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Cities are the mirror of globalization; they reproduce and anticipate the same trends and contradictions from the inside. The controversial notion of urban landscape is here explored in connection with the commons paradigm, those resources which have been studied by Elinor Ostrom, Nobel prize for economic sciences in 2009 and Author of Governing the Commons, the fundamental text for the study of collective institutions and the governance processes of natural and artificial resources. In the text the landscape is excluded from the list of commons because these identify self-governed microsystems of local-territorial resources, that is to say, a set of practices and rules of access and fruition that are the exclusive pertinence of the users of local communities. The landscape is perhaps more similar to public goods, with one condition: that its fruition from a specific point of view does not impede the aesthetic, affective, patrimonial and identity appropriation of others, nor compromises its own existence. Nevertheless, apart from this, the “health” of urban landscape is given by the simultaneity and compresence of different spaces, as is shown by the “fight” against the commercialization of public spaces of the inhabitants of the Marina neighbourhood in Cagliari.","PeriodicalId":299934,"journal":{"name":"J-Reading - Journal of Research and Didactics in Geography","volume":"80 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-06-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"J-Reading - Journal of Research and Didactics in Geography","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.4458/6964-07","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cities are the mirror of globalization; they reproduce and anticipate the same trends and contradictions from the inside. The controversial notion of urban landscape is here explored in connection with the commons paradigm, those resources which have been studied by Elinor Ostrom, Nobel prize for economic sciences in 2009 and Author of Governing the Commons, the fundamental text for the study of collective institutions and the governance processes of natural and artificial resources. In the text the landscape is excluded from the list of commons because these identify self-governed microsystems of local-territorial resources, that is to say, a set of practices and rules of access and fruition that are the exclusive pertinence of the users of local communities. The landscape is perhaps more similar to public goods, with one condition: that its fruition from a specific point of view does not impede the aesthetic, affective, patrimonial and identity appropriation of others, nor compromises its own existence. Nevertheless, apart from this, the “health” of urban landscape is given by the simultaneity and compresence of different spaces, as is shown by the “fight” against the commercialization of public spaces of the inhabitants of the Marina neighbourhood in Cagliari.
城市是全球化的镜子;它们从内部复制和预测相同的趋势和矛盾。有争议的城市景观概念在这里与公共资源范式相联系,这些资源被埃莉诺·奥斯特罗姆(Elinor Ostrom)研究过,她是2009年诺贝尔经济学奖得主,也是《治理公共资源》(Governing The commons)一书的作者,该书是研究集体制度和自然资源和人工资源治理过程的基础文本。在文本中,景观被排除在公共资源列表之外,因为它们识别了地方-领土资源的自治微系统,也就是说,一套访问和成果的实践和规则是当地社区用户的独家针对性。景观可能更类似于公共物品,但有一个条件:从特定的角度来看,它的成果不会妨碍他人的审美、情感、遗传和身份挪用,也不会损害其自身的存在。然而,除此之外,城市景观的“健康”是由不同空间的同时性和整体性所赋予的,正如卡利亚里滨海社区居民反对公共空间商业化的“斗争”所表明的那样。