3,441 results on '"Place identity"'
Search Results
202. Tangents: From the Making of Shepard & Dark
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Wurmfeld, Treva
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Country life ,Place identity ,Motion pictures -- Production and direction ,Local history ,Farm life ,Humanities ,Literature/writing - Abstract
I'm not big on autobiography or memoir. To me they're false forms. It's suspicious when someone writes a memoir. It's as if they are laying down what happened. Whereas what [...]
- Published
- 2021
203. Place Identity
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Maggino, Filomena, editor
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- 2023
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204. An image worth a thousand words? Expressions of stakeholder identity perspectives in place image descriptions
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Strandberg, Carola and Ek Styvén, Maria
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- 2021
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205. Place Branding through Resource Integration and Gastro-Cultural Experiences: A Transnational Perspective
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Stella Kladou and Nikolaos Trihas
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food tourism ,gastronomic experiences ,place identity ,destination branding ,culture ,Personnel management. Employment management ,HF5549-5549.5 - Abstract
Place branding often builds upon gastro-cultural features. Yet, the convergence point between gastro-cultural place identity and the experience on offer could (and should) further benefit from contemporary studies in emerging fields, such as value co-creation and the identity-based approach to place branding. This study contributes towards this direction by examining the practices of relevant actors with main place branding authority. Drawing from their online information and presence, a thematic analysis of relevant brands in Greece and Turkey illustrates that operand and operant resource integration reflect the synergies developed between the gastronomic culture in, for, of the place. Further, actors’ intention to co-create the brand influences and is influenced by the brand. Theoretical and practical insights are derived from this study, which may direct future research and inform policymakers about sustainable, inclusive approaches.
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- 2021
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206. Color Visual Communication to Create Brand Space Identity in Interior Design
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Dalia Mohamed Ezzat Selim and Ahmed Elshakhs
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brand place ,place identity ,color space communication ,Fine Arts ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 - Abstract
Color is one of the most dominant tools for designing compelling environments. It holds aesthetic value and has significance when assessing design elements. Color is the design element that charms us, emotionally and mentally, and is considered the most influential instrument in the hands of the designer as it is permanently stored in our memory. Colors are fundamental features of our visual sensitivity and environmental experience. In addition, it has the power to attract people to space and is used to encode the place by linking color to certain brands in complex globalized networks. To reflect, an increase in branding has been one of the most effective marketing phenomena nowadays, and has been included in most commercial business’ strategies. Branding places today has been modified deeply from the perspective of identity and image viewpoint. The overall design of a building and its spaces should reflect a clear purpose; moreover, it is beneficial to establish controlled and reliable rules and hidden agreements between the brand and client through color. This paper questions; How brand design creates a lasting appearance that bridges today with where the brand will grow over time? What is the color brand strategy to create place identity and space communication? How branding feeds into globalization, which has become significantly relevant, increased market entry, and efficiency of international travel? Since the relationship of color to space is one of the main objectives of active design to create a suitable agenda for specific functions, a thorough theoretical examination of the mental and physical impacts of color has been conducted, and an analytic study of the branding of companies specialized in providing mobile phone services in Egypt has been incorporated. The objective of this is to facilitate the bridging of emotional connections between clients, cities, and regions to accelerate brand growth and integrate color as a branding principle in Interior Design.
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- 2021
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207. Measuring place attachment, identity, and memory in urban spaces: case of the Walled City of Lahore, Pakistan
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Armaghan Zahid and Damla Misirlisoy
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urban space ,streets ,historic cities ,place attachment ,place identity ,place memory ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 - Abstract
Public spaces are essential for any city as they define place character; they are the meeting point for social and cultural actions. Place attachment is moulded by the tie between individuals and places. The research examines the historic streets, which are remainders of their period when the pedestrian flow was predominant and had exceptional qualities that supported social action. The changed settings nowadays might have changed people’s views and the investigation was made to question and check individual’s common memory and their sensitive ties to the historic streets. The four streets from the Walled City of Lahore were selected upon their significance of history and usage. The questionnaires were prepared and the fieldwork analysis was conducted face to face and selected streets were investigated in the terms of, place attachment, identity, and memory. The outcome proved that there is a promising feeling of attachment towards the selected streets and lacking qualities of a street can be improved if look closely at the worthy streets. The study addressed an important issue of marginalization and the results from the Shah-Almi street shows that their act will create the walled city streets to lose their identity as it is formed by its users.
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- 2021
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208. Sense of place and climate change : urban poor adaptation in the Dominican Republic
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Schofield, Holly, Stein Heinemann, Alfredo, and Jasani, Rubina
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305.5 ,place attachment ,place dependence ,place identity ,climate change adaptation ,Dominican Republic ,climate change ,sense of place ,adaptation - Abstract
Adaptation has increasingly come to be recognised as an urgent and necessary response to climate change. The ability of a system to carryout adaptation is dependent on its adaptive capacity. To date, the majority of research relating to adaptation has focused on the objective and material determinants of a system's capacity to adapt to severe and extreme weather impacts. Whereas the role that subjective factors, such as people's perceptions, beliefs and values play in that same process, has received comparatively less attention. Despite being a global phenomenon, climate change is being experienced and responded to in local places. More than just physical locations, places are often imbued with meaning by the people associated with them. This thesis argues that these meanings have implications for the ways in which people adapt, or fail to adapt, to climate change impacts. It uses the concept 'sense of place', as a means of capturing this place meaning and as a lens for exploring adaptive behaviours in three low-income urban communities in the Dominican Republic. In particular it examines the specific roles of residents' place attachment, dependence and identity in motivating and constraining adaptive behaviours. Based on qualitative research with ethnographic underpinnings, the thesis shows that the urban poor sense of place is shaped by interconnected relationships between residents and; their homes, the physical and social aspects of their communities and a range of non-community actors. These relationships are shaped by physical and social interactions with and within places, but also through the discursive construction of the locations and the inhabitants of them in public opinion. Residents continuously seek out ways to enhance their sense of place, at times as an improvement in the built environment as a means of preventing or ameliorating environmental threats and events. However, often it is enhancement, in an aesthetic sense, which is envisaged as being of equal and sometimes greater importance. Although aesthetic improvements sometimes have the resultant impact of enabling adaptation, this tends to be incidental, rather than purposeful. Despite the importance placed by the urban poor on their sense of place, these subjective determinants and adaptation in the urban environment, remain unrecognised as well as absent from local institutional and policy radars. Overall the research suggests the need for a more comprehensive approach to understanding adaptive capacities. It requires an approach which continues to measure the objective determinants but which also recognises the role of people's relationships to places in converting or failing to convert objective capacity into climate change action and in dictating the type activities that are valued and prioritised by urban poor residents themselves.
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- 2017
209. Flow experience and city identity in the restorative environment: A conceptual model and nature-based intervention
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Mei Xie, Yanhui Mao, and Rui Yang
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flow experience ,optimal experience ,city identity ,place identity ,urban identity ,restorative environment ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Within environmental psychology, the restorative environment is receiving increasing attention due to its favorable impact on people's mental recovery, stress reduction, and psychophysiological well-being. Flow theory, as one of the foundations of positive psychology, is a popular theoretical framework for understanding human flourishing and well-being. The restorative environment is suggested to facilitate flow experience and city identity from the perspective of positive environmental psychology. Nonetheless, systematic research investigating them all together can hardly be traced. Thus, through a preliminary review of 169 relevant studies retrieved from the data source, this work proposes a novel theoretical model in which people's interactions within the restorative environment facilitate their experience of flow and perceived city identity. Additionally, this research provides conceptual guidance for city workers to engage in nature-based intervention and leisure therapy for improved well-being. Overall, this review endeavors to contribute to developing urban workers' restoration, happiness, and well-being from both practical and theoretical perspectives.
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- 2022
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210. 7 Questions for Etaf Rum
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Johnson, Michelle
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Evil Eye (Rum, Etaf) (Novel) ,Novels of character ,Place identity ,Nostalgia ,Literature/writing - Abstract
In Etaf Rum's second novel, Evil Eye, a young Palestinian American artist and mother of two contends with the effects of intergenerational trauma and her complicated relationship with her mother. [...]
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- 2023
211. Place Identity and Traumatic Experiences in the Context of Wildfires.
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de Jesús, Peter, Olivos-Jara, Pablo, and Navarro, Oscar
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Climate change represents a threat to life; as such, it is associated with psychological disorders. The subjective perceptions of life impacts from different traumatic experiences develop understanding and the enable predictions of future consequences. This psychological impact also tends to increase the risk perception of climate change and the intention to prevent it. Greater emphasis on place identity can promote resilience and prevent psychological distress. The aim of this descriptive cross-sectional study is to describe the ontological life impact of fires, based on socio-demographic variables, risk perception, self-perceived resistance (SPR), and place identity. The sample consisted of 210 residents of areas affected by forest fires in Gran Canaria (Spain), who answered a questionnaire consisting of multiple scales and an assessment of the traumatic experience through the VIVO (Spanish initials of Ontological Vital Impact Assessment) questionnaire. The clustering of areas according to SPR and neighbourhood was considered a new variable, referred to as territorial resistance. This variable was useful in describing the different profiles of ontological life impacts and risk perceptions. The ontological life impact of the extreme experience differed between unaffected and affected people. Feeling that they had been judged for the occurrence was associated with lower psychological adjustment and a greater perception of control over the risk. Control also increased with place identity and the number of experiences. Emphasising risk, recognising the local knowledge of residents, and including them in decision-making and future action plans contributes to a sense of community, and thus, can improve coping. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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212. Us Over Here Versus Them Over There...Literally: Measuring Place Resentment in American Politics.
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Munis, B. Kal
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RESENTMENT , *PUBLIC opinion , *POLITICAL campaigns , *POLITICAL attitudes , *POLITICAL scientists , *PSYCHOMETRICS - Abstract
Political scientists are accustomed to imagining electoral politics in geographical terms. For instance, there is a "red America" that largely covers the country's expansive heartland and there is a "blue America" mostly confined to the coasts. Until recently, however, public opinion scholars had largely lost sight of the fact that the places where people live, and people's identification with those places, shape public opinion and political behavior. This paper develops and validates a flexible psychometric scale measure of a key political psychological dimension of place: place resentment. Place resentment is hostility toward place-based outgroups perceived as enjoying undeserved benefits beyond those enjoyed by one's place-based ingroup. Regression results indicate that males, ruralites, younger Americans, those high in place identity, and those high in racial resentment are more likely to harbor higher levels of place resentment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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213. Exploring Symbolic Meaning in Landscaping Choices within a Desert City.
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Sampson, Marena, Budruk, Megha, and Larson, Kelli L.
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DESERTS , *URBAN parks , *JOB stress , *LANDSCAPES , *OPEN spaces , *HOME ownership - Abstract
Metropolitan Phoenix, Arizona, in the Sonoran Desert, provides an excellent opportunity to understand residents' preferences for desert-adapted xeric landscaping. While much is known about the relationships between sociodemographics and broad environmental values on xeric landscaping choices, the influence of other variables remains unexplored, especially interactions with and attachments to the desert. We therefore examined the influences of recreational visits to local desert mountain parks and symbolic meanings associated with the native desert on household xeric landscaping preferences. Within a larger study, select questions captured socio-demographics, visitation to desert parks and open spaces, place identity, and xeric landscape preferences. Using Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regression, we confirmed that homeownership and a shorter residency predicted preference for xeric landscapes. Hispanics were less likely to prefer xeric landscaping. Interestingly, the novel factor of identity with the desert significantly and positively predicted xeric landscaping preference while visitation to desert parks and open spaces did not. Findings provide several important management implications. First, Phoenix has an opportunity to foster connections with the surrounding environment through its extensive desert mountain parks. Increasing connections between residents and the parks may help shift personal preferences to xeric yard types. Park managers might also work to further stress how household decisions can affect the desert environment. Second, park visitation alone may not suffice to create connections with the desert environment. Instead, park managers should focus on creating opportunities for visitors to recognize the unique, living aspects of the parks and build personal relationships with the ecosystem. Interpretation encouraging emotional connections to the desert environment may aid in fostering an identity with the desert. In addition, messaging and signage campaigns that link people to the parks may prove a novel way of combatting lawn water usage within desert cities. Given their opportunities to foster place identity, urban parks may be important influencers in promoting native plant landscaping. In conclusion, connecting people to their surrounding environments can influence preferences for similar landscape types at the household level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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214. LUGARES SAGRADOS E CULTURAS DO SUL DO BRASIL: Um estudo sobre comunidades sustentáveis.
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Viebrantz Braga, Adriana, Debli Libardoni, Thais, and Ávila Chiarelli, Lígia Maria
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SUSTAINABLE communities ,CULTURAL identity ,SACRED space ,LOCAL culture ,GROUP identity ,PUBLIC spaces ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Copyright of Pixo: Revista de Arquitetura Cidade e Contemporaneidade is the property of Pixo Revista de Arquitetura Cidade e Contemporaneidade and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2022
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215. The Processes of Adaptation, Assimilation and Integration in the Country of Migration: A Psychosocial Perspective on Place Identity Changes.
- Author
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Cormoș, Viorica Cristina
- Abstract
In the process of migration, the migrant goes through certain stages and a series of transformations that leave their mark on their individuality over time. These unavoidable processes, adaptation, assimilation, and eventually integration, as well as numerous other factors, lead to changes in identity. The concept addressed in the paper, which supports the understanding of the process of change, is that of acculturation. Acculturation is the process by which an individual acquires and adapts to a new cultural environment as a result of being placed in a new culture. The theoretical approach led to an objective understanding of the process of identity change in a given context. Symbolic interactionism theory aims to reveal the internal mechanisms of identity formation by overcoming the opposition between the individual and the collective, and ethno-linguistic identity theory posits that when faced with alternative courses of action, individuals will choose the one that will enhance their self-presentation. The aim of this article is to examine identity-level changes in migrants who have undergone the processes of adaptation, assimilation, and integration in the country of migration from a psychosocial perspective. In order to achieve this aim, an interview with 30 Romanians who emigrated abroad was conducted. Based on a conceptual and methodological framework, the present article carried out a thematic analysis in which the most significant changes in mentality, thinking, self-esteem, principles of life, culture, attitude and behavior, identity place/space, etc. were highlighted through concrete quotes from the interviews with the migrants, all of which were explained through the identity-migration theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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216. Reconceptualising Sense of Place: Towards a Conceptual Framework for Investigating Individual-Community-Place Interrelationships.
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Erfani, Goran
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PLACE attachment (Psychology) , *SATISFACTION , *LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
While sense of place has been increasingly used in planning literature over the last five decades, its conceptualisation varies by discipline and theoretical orientation, with disjointed elements. This study develops a three-theme conceptual framework articulating individual-community-place interrelationships by critically reviewing the literature on sense of place and place-based constructs of attachment, identity, and satisfaction. Theorising the interactions in-between contributes to theoretical debates on sense of place and developing conceptual clarity to understand the planning context, processes, and outcomes, informing decision- and policy-making. It also facilitates the analysis and synthesis of complex narratives in qualitative studies of people-place relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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217. Customer delight, engagement, experience, value co-creation, place identity, and revisit intention: a new conceptual framework.
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Shoukat, Muhammad Haroon and Ramkissoon, Haywantee
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CUSTOMER cocreation , *CUSTOMER satisfaction , *PLANNED behavior theory , *CUSTOMER experience , *INTENTION , *CUSTOMER relations - Abstract
This research note explored the less-understood relationships between customer delights and revisit intention. We draw on extant literature to develop and propose a new conceptual framework underpinned by cognitive appraisal theory, theory of planned behavior, and attachment theory. This conceptual note proposed relationships between customer engagement (CE), customer experience (CX), place identity, and value co-creation between customer delight and revisits intention. This note offers insights on the essential role of customer delight in tourism, supporting effective interactions with CE, CX, place identity, and value co-creation for destination strategy development. This is one of the earliest initiatives to reinvent the wheel of customer delight in tourism to encourage tourist behavior intentions. 这篇研究报告探讨了顾客愉悦感和重访意图之间鲜为人知的关系. 我们借鉴现有文献,以认知评价理论、计划行为理论和依恋理论为基础,发展并提出了一个新的概念框架. 本概念性说明提出了客户参与度(CE)、客户体验(CX)、场所认同和客户满意度与重访意图之间的价值共同创造之间的关系.本说明提供了关于旅游业中顾客愉悦感的重要作用的见解,支持与CE、CX、场所标识的有效互动,以及为目的地战略开发共同创造价值. 这是最早的一项举措,旨在重塑旅游业中顾客愉悦的车轮,以鼓励游客的行为意图. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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218. Impact of displacement on place attachment, landscape value and trust in the Sonepur–Bazari open cast coal mining area, Raniganj Coalfield, West Bengal.
- Author
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Mondal, Rakhi and Mistri, Biswaranjan
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STRIP mining ,PLACE attachment (Psychology) ,COALFIELDS ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,TEST reliability ,COAL mining - Abstract
Mining induced displacement and its impact on social environment has been researched with an immense interest in social sciences for a long period of time. The present study deals with the impact of mining-induced displacement and rehabilitation on psycho-social behaviour in Sonepur–Bazari open cast coal mining area. Place attachment, landscape value and trust have been taken into consideration to understand the effect on psycho-social behaviour in the respective area. Data for this investigation are predominantly derived from semi structured questionnaire survey of 282 participants from 14 villages of the study area. Cronbach's Alpha has been calculated to test the internal consistency and reliability of the questions. To measure the answers 5-point Likert scale has been used. The responses have systematically analysed after simulation and it has been concluded that the monitory compensation comprehensively contributed to improve the monthly income of the project affected families but the grim reality is that it does not help to improve the place attachment of the residents with their land rather a weak attachment has been found in the rehabilitation sites. The values of landscapes are also drastically changes from pre displacement to post displacement period. Trust has been calculated as an indicator of community attachment. The result indicates that the trust within a community becomes weak after displacement and a negative correlation has been found between mining-induced income inequality and trust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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219. An Investigation Into the Effects of Destination Sensory Experiences at Visitors' Digital Engagement: Empirical Evidence From Sanya, China.
- Author
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Jin Ai, Ling Yan, Yubei Hu, and Yue Liu
- Subjects
ONLINE comments ,TOURIST attractions ,CONSUMERS' reviews ,SOCIAL media ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
This study investigates the mechanism of how sensory experiences influence visitors' digital engagement with a destination through establishing a strong bond and identification between a destination and tourist utilizing a two-step process. First, visitors' sensory experiences in a destination are identified through a content analysis of online review comments posted by visitors. Afterward, the effects of those sensory experiences on visitors' digital engagement through destination dependence and identification with that destination are examined. Findings suggest that sensory experiences are critical antecedents of visitors' bond and identification with a destination. Visitors' positive destination-related sensory experiences increase their dependence on and identification with the destination, and this dependence and identification positively influence their digital engagement behavior on social media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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220. DEFINING PLACE BRANDING THROUGH LOCAL AND NATIONAL IDENTITY AND NATIONAL STEREOTYPES.
- Author
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BRICIU, V.-A. and BRICIU, A.
- Subjects
- *
PLACE marketing , *NATIONAL character , *BRAND image , *BRANDING (Marketing) , *BRAND identification , *STEREOTYPES - Abstract
From a communication perspective, it can be considered that the identity of a brand is defined by the one who transmits the message, while the image of it is the actual image developed in the mind of the receiver. Brand identity is how the brand owner wants it to be perceived, but on the other hand, brand image is how the brand is perceived. The present study highlights some of the structures associated with brands and places, clarifying, from a theoretical point of view, the two important characteristics related to the universe of brands, namely identity and image. These are analysed from the perspective of the conditioning of places, through identity (e.g., local, national) and national stereotypes (with various connotations on the image of the respective place). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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221. Tell me your story: Branding destinations through residents' (place) stories.
- Author
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Hay, Nicole A., Chien, P. Monica, and Ruhanen, Lisa
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PLACE marketing ,BRANDING (Marketing) ,BRAND identification ,RESIDENTS - Abstract
Concerns have been raised that destination branding often overlooks the destination's internal stakeholders, and in some cases, has resulted in a brand identity that does not reflect the meanings and emotions that residents attach to places. Consequently, scholars have advocated for a more participatory approach to destination branding in which residents' sense of place can be acknowledged, represented, and operationalized. This paper synthesizes these arguments and demonstrates that such an approach can be achieved by embracing residents' place stories. Through storytelling, residents construe different facets of the place identity that is the foundation of destination brand identity. Hence, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the role, constituents, and effects of storytelling in destination branding, particularly exploring whose stories should be told and how these stories should be conveyed. In doing so, a participatory approach to destination branding is presented that employs residents' place stories as a genuine form of participation in the destination branding process. Lastly, an agenda for future research is proposed, and practical implications for destination marketing practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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222. Znaczenie locus sacer w identyfikacji i właściwej organizacji przestrzeni zamieszkiwania XXI w.: Studium przypadku w hybrydowej megametropolii miasta-państwa Singapur (cz.1).
- Author
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GIL-MASTALERCZYK, JOANNA
- Abstract
Copyright of Housing Environment / Środowisko Mieszkaniowe is the property of Chair of Housing Environment, Faculty of Architecture, Cracow University of Technology and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
223. Making post-colonial place identity: the regeneration of the St Lazarus neighbourhood, Macau
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Ye, Xi
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- 2021
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224. The manifestations of Livonian intangible cultural heritage across the Latvian and Estonian border: framing early field notes from research sites
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Lolita Ozoliņa, Valts Ernštreits, Kadri Koreinik, and Ieva Vītola
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cultural landscape ,linguistic landscape ,place identity ,intangible cultural heritage ,Livonian ,vaimne kultuuripärand ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,Finnic. Baltic-Finnic ,PH91-98.5 - Abstract
Today the Livonian core area includes 14 coastal villages on the northern Courland peninsula in the northwest of Latvia. Yet, the manifestations of Livonian intangible heritage can be observed in several cultural landscapes as Livonians once inhabited territories along the Gulf of Rīga, extending into modern Estonian lands and the lower course of the Gauja and Daugava Rivers. Despite the indigenous origin of Livonian culture, these manifestations are often marginalised and not immediately visible. This paper seeks to describe the first comparative findings from the international research project “Re-voicing cultural landscapes: narratives, perspectives, and performances of marginalised intangible cultural heritage”, which brings together researchers from four European universities, incl. the University of Latvia and the University of Tartu. Kokkuvõte. Lolita Ozoliņa, Valts Ernštreits, Kadri Koreinik, Ieva Vītola: Liivi vaimse kultuuripärandi manifestatsioonid Lätis ja üle piiri Eestis: raamistamas märkmeid välitöödelt. Nüüdsel ajal tuntakse liivi alana Kuramaa 14 rannaküla Loode-Lätis. Ometi leidub liivi vaimse kultuuripärandi märke nii mõnelgi pool mujal – neil kultuurimaastikel, kus piki Liivi lahe vasak ja paremkallast kulges liivlaste asustus, mis ulatus koguni Koiva ja Väina jõe alamjooksule ja üle riigipiiri Eestissegi. Vaatamata liivi kultuuri põlistele juurtele on need märgid aga marginaalseks kahandatud ja sestap silmale peidetud. Artikkel võtab kirjeldada ja võrrelda esmaseid andmeid rahvusvahelisest uurimisprojektist “Kultuurimaastike hääle taasleidmine: marginaliseeritud vaimse kultuuripärandi narratiivid, väljavaated ja toimimine”, mis toob kokku teadlasi neljast Euroopa ülikoolist, sh Läti ja Tartu ülikoolist. Kubbõvõttõks. Lolita Ozoliņa, Valts Ernštreits, Kadri Koreinik, Ieva Vītola: Līvõd vaimliz kultūr pierāndõks manifestātsijd Lețmōl ja iļ rubīž Ēstimōl: tǟdõlpanmizt nurmtīestõ. Paldīņiz āigal amā jemīņ neku līvõd jeltõbkūož ātõ tundtõb 14 Kurmō rāndakillõ – Līvõd rānda. Sīegid līvõd vaimliz kultūr pierāndõks um liedtõb ka mūsõ – nēši kultūrmōnistis, kus mȯlmõd pūol Piškīzt mīerda vaņši aigši jelīztõ līvlizt, ja mis ulātizt Koiva ja Vēna jougūd sōņ ja iļ rubīž ka Ēstimōlõ. Vaņtlõmõt līvõ kultūr muinizt jūrd pǟl, se pierāndõks ni um sōnd jo pientizõks ja sīestõ ka siļmšti urgtõd. Kēra nīžõb ja ītlõb ežmiži tuņšlimiztieutidi rovvõdvailizõs tuņšlimizprojekts “Kultūrmōnistõd īel ūd pǟl lieudimi: margināliz vaimliz kultūr pierāndõks naratīvõd, tulbizt võimizt ja pīlimi”, mis tūob īdõkubbõ tuņšlijiži nēļast Eirōp iļīzskūolst, nänt siegās ka Tartu ja Lețmō Iļīzskūolst.
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- 2022
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225. Putting sense of place at the centre of place brand development.
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François Lecompte, Agnès, Trelohan, Magali, Gentric, Michel, and Aquilina, Manuelle
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PLACE marketing ,QUALITATIVE research ,DESTINATION image (Tourism) ,TRAVEL promotions ,FRENCH people ,COASTAL development - Abstract
Developing a place brand involves highlighting the distinctive attributes of a place that could be used to enhance its attractiveness. This study is in line with recent literature where the concept of place identity is being replaced by sense of place, which provides an holistic view of a place by integrating all users’ experiences and feelings. Through a qualitative study involving 31 individual interviews with users and meetings with managers of a French coastal area, this paper proposes a five-dimensional definition of sense of place and its use as a tool for developing a place brand in 3 ways: defining the place brand concept, bringing together the internal stakeholders and invoving users in brand building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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226. The layers of history: New architecture interventions in castle ruins
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Iwona Wilczek
- Subjects
Architectural heritage ,Place identity ,Visitor centre ,Cultural context ,Phenomenology ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 - Abstract
This paper aims to analyse new architectural works that were created within the ruins of castles and fortifications. The contribution addresses the question whether it is possible to indicate common features in these types of objects, by studying what changed and how it changed in the complexes of historic ruins by introducing a new layer: a new form in their space. The analysis covers eight complexes of castle ruins located in Europe, all being important elements of local historical heritage, all preserved in their historical forms as permanent ruins. Such places are characterised by high imageability, which is conducive to maintaining interest, despite political or ideological changes. The need to introduce new functions, which is connected with this interest, raises questions related to preserving the identity and authenticity of the place, while at the same time building relationships with modern architecture.The research concerned examples from Europe, mostly post-competition works. Research and analysis have shown that all the objects are characterised by well thought-out urban solutions and carefully selected locations of new buildings within the existing historic ruins, thereby helping maintain the structural order between the existing and the new spatial forms. Interventions within the castle ruins were carried out using modern architectural language, using modern techniques and solutions, with great attention to detail. They are characterised by the abstraction of new forms and the creative reinterpretation of existing architectural elements and material solutions of the monuments. The consciously applied contrast of forms and materials means that the historical heritage is being rediscovered, enriched with new, currently necessary functions. In all the described works, the introduction of new spatial experiences within existing objects constituted a significant value. The examples analysed show that the experience and analysis of the broadly understood historical, urban and architectural context are conducive to the creation of valuable architectural works. The characteristics of these examples may contribute to a broader debate on the dialogue between historical heritage and contemporary architecture.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. INTERNATIONAL TOURIST’S PERCEPTION OF THE DESTINATION IMAGE: A STUDY APPLIED TO LUANDA, ANGOLA
- Author
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Telma VAN-DUNEM, Arnaldo COELHO, and Cristela BAIRRADA
- Subjects
tourist perception ,positive and negative emotions ,luanda ,place identity ,optimal distinctiveness ,authenticity ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
This investigation aims to study the perception of “foreign” tourists regarding the destination image of Luanda, thus evaluating the impact of place identity, optimal distinctiveness and authenticity on positive and negative emotions and how these emotions can influence satisfaction, affective attachment and the intention to revisit. For the analysis of statistical data, the Structural Equation Model was used. Results were based on a sample of 252 tourists. This research showed that place identity influences positive and negative emotions, while optimal distinctiveness and authenticity only impact the positive emotions of the tourist. It was further evidenced that positive and negative emotions have a positive influence on satisfaction, but only positive emotions have an impact on affective attachment and intention to revisit. This investigation shows how positive and negative emotions may link the tourists’ perceptions when visiting Luanda to the relationship they want to maintain with the city and to their willingness to return.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
228. EDITOR'S NOTE
- Author
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Simon, Daniel
- Subjects
Ecocriticism (Literature) ,Literary newspapers and periodicals ,Place identity ,Literature/writing - Abstract
The volcano is perhaps no longer just the symbol of social or warlike violence but the metaphor of a real ecological time bomb to come. --Charif Majdalani, 'Dancing at the [...]
- Published
- 2024
229. Always More Than a Place: A Conversation about Palestine with Isabella Hammad
- Author
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Parssinen, Keija
- Subjects
The Parisian (Novel) ,Place identity ,Palestinian Arab writers -- Interviews ,Literature/writing - Abstract
I've been thinking about literary imprints lately, and how difficult it is to discern the books of one house from another in commercial publishing. Yet I realized that many of [...]
- Published
- 2021
230. Family Identity, Place Identity, and Chinese Farmers’ Environment-Friendly Production Behavior
- Author
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Hao Li, Tiantian Li, and Wei-Yew Chang
- Subjects
environment-friendly agriculture ,farmer’s production behavior ,family identity ,place identity ,China ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 - Abstract
In response to the sustainable development goal of agriculture put forward by the United Nations, countries have introduced a series of agricultural environmental protection policies. However, the effectiveness of these policies has been hindered by insufficient responses from farmers. This study begins with the fundamental logic of farmers’ production behavior and first introduces family and place identities into the theoretical analysis framework of farmers’ environment-friendly production behavior (EPB). Using primary survey data for farmers from the northwestern Chinese province of Gansu, a hierarchical regression and simple slope analysis models were developed to verify how family and place identities affect farmers’ EPB. The potential moderating effect of place identity on the relationship between family identity and farmers’ EPB is further investigated. The results show that improving family identity has a significantly negative effect on farmers’ EPB, while improving place identity can significantly promote farmers’ EPB. Compared with respondents who have a low place identity, the inhibitory effect of family identity on farmers’ EPB is significantly weakened for those who have a high place identity, which suggests that farmers with a high place identity are more likely to engage in EPBs in agricultural production. This study highlights the importance of considering the economic logic toward maximizing family economic interests and the social logic oriented toward collective interests in the decision-making process of agricultural environmental policies.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
231. Investigating Influence of Visual Elements of Arcade Buildings and Streetscapes on Place Identity Using Eye-Tracking and Semantic Differential Methods
- Author
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Hao Fu, Pohsun Wang, Junling Zhou, Shuyuan Zhang, and Yan Li
- Subjects
arcade architecture ,eye tracking ,place identity ,visual elements ,streetscape ,semantic differential method ,Building construction ,TH1-9745 - Abstract
This study explored the overall visual elements of arcade buildings and streetscapes from the perspective of tourists and then evaluated their influence on the identity and emotion of places. The scope of the research was to take the arcade building in the port area of Shantou Small Park in Guangdong, China, and apply the eye-tracking experiment method and semantic difference method. This entailed collecting the eye-tracking data of 16 people, implementing 334 questionnaires for evaluation, verifying the correlation between the visual elements and place identity emotions, and then screening out the visual elements that affect place identity through correlation analysis and multiple linear regression analysis. The results show that plaque text morphological richness (p = 0.045 < 0.05, and the regression coefficient B = 0.146), the color brightness of plaque text (p = 0.031 < 0.01, and the regression coefficient B = 0.171), window morphological richness (p = 0.038 < 0.05, and the regression coefficient B = 0.106), window color brilliance (p = 0.047 < 0.01, and regression coefficient B = 0.094), and plant color brilliance (p = 0.029 < 0.05, and the regression coefficient B = 0.154) are five visual element evaluation factors that have a significant correlation with the identity and emotion of places. Although the fineness of architectural decoration is negatively correlated with place identity, it is not obviously significant. The research results provide reference for the visual control design of arcade buildings.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
232. Spatial Relations between the Theatre and Its Surroundings: An Assessment Protocol on the Example of Warsaw (Poland)
- Author
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Agnieszka Starzyk, Kinga Rybak-Niedziółka, Janusz Marchwiński, Ewa Rykała, and Elena Lucchi
- Subjects
architecture ,theatre ,public space ,space attractor ,place identity ,Agriculture - Abstract
Theater as a place, but also as a field of human and team activity involving the creation of performances performed in the presence of the viewer, has a centuries-old history. This study aims at examining the links between theatre architecture/space and public spaces, trying to answer to what extent these objects have become attractors in its space and how they affect the activity of cultural and social life. The subjects of the study are Warsaw theatres, both historical and contemporary, in the context of their impact on the surrounding public spaces. A specific methodology was elaborated to evaluate potential impacts. According to the spatial relations between the theatre and its surroundings, they are clustered in the following typologies: emanation, isolation, and interference theatre. The research methods applied for defining and solving the scientific problem are: (i) critical analysis, (ii) comparative analysis, (iii) observation without intervention, and (iv) intuitive method based on the author’s personal experience. The conclusions are based on empirical research, with particular emphasis on the research material obtained by field research. The results of the research allow one to draw conclusions regarding the influence of theatrical places on public spaces in the city structure. The mission of the theater is changed, activating events and building social bonds. Theater space and its surroundings are shaped in accordance with these new standards and social expectations to be transformed into a public space of a cultural nature. Thus, presently, urban theatrical space is a site for spectacle, with a social and cultural mission. Theater space and its surroundings should be shaped in accordance with changing standards and social expectations, and it should be a public space of a cultural nature.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
233. The role of sustainability in enhancing place performance through an identity-based approach to place branding
- Author
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Kroger, Hanne
- Subjects
658.8 ,Stakeholder Theory ,Sustainability ,Place Branding ,Place Identity ,Wine Tourism ,Wine Industry - Abstract
Preventing the environmental impacts of economic growth is an important goal in today’s marketplace. This concern for a sustainable future incentivises marketing based around sustainability. The food and beverage industry had its fair share of criticism as its production uses more natural resources than most industries. One industry that has been ahead of other food processors in adopting environmental practices is the wine industry. The close relationship between wine and places is undisputable and so strong that people frequently visit places of wine production in the form of wine tourism contributing significantly to regional economies. For wine to be associated with sustainability, regional stakeholders would be required to represent similar values. The branding of places is far more intricate than branding of products and needs the support of those stakeholders involved. Such support is often discussed as a shared place identity. Only limited previous research has addressed whether the communication of sustainability enhances business performance. No research to date has empirically tested whether a shared stakeholder identity influences the relationship between sustainability branding and business success. To close this gap, a sequential mixed methods procedure was specified using quantitative questionnaires with 420 subjects and 20 qualitative interviews. A model with consequences of sustainability branding and a shared place identity was established using extant research. Mostly existing scales were adapted to fit this research context and tested with a structural modelling approach among Australian and German wineries. It was found that practicing and communicating sustainability significantly influences performance on an individual winery and regional destination level. Furthermore, a shared place identity has been established as a critical success factor in the relationship between sustainability branding and place performance. Both theoretical and practical implications can be drawn from this research. The results have provided empirical evidence on the direct relationship between sustainability and performance, in addition to the moderating role of a shared place identity. These findings extend the tourism literature which states that businesses practicing sustainably, enhance their own performance as well as the overall regional performance. It also extends stakeholder theory by establishing that a shared place identity strengthens this relationship even further, highlighting the need for regional management to initiate a shared sense of identification. Practically, regional managers who are eager to enhance economic performance should be actively involved in developing relationships between the individual wineries and the regional management in order to foster a shared place identity. Furthermore, it is of major importance to establish positive attitudes toward sustainability among winery owners. This can be done by building the confidence of winery owners by offering infrastructures for learning and support about sustainability.
- Published
- 2016
234. How and why does place identity affect residents' spontaneous culture conservation in ethnic tourism community? A value co-creation perspective.
- Author
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Yang, Yang, Wang, Shaoqin, Cai, Yi, and Zhou, Xing
- Subjects
- *
CUSTOMER cocreation , *SELF-efficacy , *RESIDENTS , *ETHNIC tourism , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Although residents' value co-creation is critical for culture conservation and sustainable development in the ethnic tourism community, few studies have investigated the residents' value co-creation mechanism. To fill this gap, this study proposes a conceptual model and tests the relationships among place identity, mediators (interaction attitude, responsibility, and innovation attitude), spontaneous culture conservation, and the moderators of self-efficacy using the latent-moderated structural equations approach. Results show that place identity is positively related to spontaneous culture conservation. In particular, only responsibility and innovation attitude mediate place identity's effect on spontaneous culture conservation. In addition, self-efficacy moderates place identity's indirect effect on spontaneous culture conservation through responsibility and innovation attitude. These findings help clarify the mechanism of residents' value co-creation and promote the sustainable development of ethnic tourism communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. 基于集体记忆的红色旅游地地方性建构 --以云南宾川新庄红军村为例.
- Author
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马云, 钱俊希, and 唐雪琼
- Abstract
Place is an aggregate of meanings based on the emotional connection between people and a physical locality, fraught with social and cultural significances. It provides a spatial anchor for memory construction, value perception, and emotional experience for individuals and groups. Among the variegated factors that contribute to the construction of place, collective memory assumes a prominent role. On the one hand, local material conditions and landscapes provide clues and references to the past, essential for the construction of collective memory. Conversely, collective memory is embedded in the ongoing negotiation and production of locality and spaces, which contributes to specific ways of narrating a fluid and dynamic place identity. Taking Xinzhuang Village in Binchuan County, Yunnan Province as a case study, this article analyzes the process of place reconstruction based on local collective memory in the context of red tourism development, focusing on its specific spatial manifestations of memory and analyzing how collective memory participates in the production of local cultural identities. The fieldwork results show that different local actors in the village participate in the remaking of collective memory differently and with different priorities. The reconstruction of collective memory is accompanied by the continuous negotiation of identity, social relations, and communal organization. Collective memories give rise to shared patterns of everyday life and symbolization: reconciling the relationships between different groups. Specific attributes of place provide the basic building blocks of collective memory, which in turn reshapes material spaces and local cultural performances. Place identity, and vice versa, continuously strengthen collective memory in the construction of a red tourism destination. Collective memories facilitate the creation of a renewed local context. In this context, collective memories are performed and regenerated in embodied practices such as rituals and tourism behaviors, which constantly inject new cultural connotations into place reconstruction. At the same time, collective memory continuously guides spatial practices and the production of social and material spaces. This paper concludes that place elements not only trigger the recall, storage, and recreation of memory in the context of red tourism but also express the local characteristics, cultures, and identities reconstructed by collective memory. In this process, the landscape construction of Xinzhuang village endows collective memory with stability and persistence, and we argue that place concretizes and contextualizes collective memories. Thus, the interaction between memory and place both enhances the place identity and memory, especially for those who inhabit the place. The cultural landscapes, and local discourses constructed by collective memory have become the most significant local attributes in the process of expressing placeness. In response to the view that the place is understood as continuous change and dynamic construction, this paper understands collective memories as fluid, dynamic and socially negotiated, and clarifies the dialectical, mutually constitutive relationships between place and memory. It addresses the relative dearth of research on the construction and reconstruction of collective memory from the perspective of place and place identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Place as social identity: an analysis of the spatial enactments of community loss and activism within the built environment surrounding Grenfell Tower.
- Author
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Waine, Harriet and Chapman, Madeleine
- Subjects
- *
GROUP identity , *BUILT environment , *SOCIAL psychology , *COMMUNITY involvement , *ACTIVISM - Abstract
This article is based on analysis of narrative interviews with individuals active in local community work in the aftermath of the Grenfell Tower fire. It explores how the public spaces and buildings around the tower were claimed and shared by the community, first for emergency support and then for collective mourning, remembrance, worship, and activism. Applying the social psychology of community participation, the article elaborates place identity as a form of social identity and shows how participation functions to organise shared representations of local conditions and facilitate empowerment for social change. Further, the article posits that, in contexts of urban super-diversity, the shared use of local spaces, including faith spaces, generates new forms of belonging-in-multiculture that can become the basis for community development and collective struggle against racialised marginalisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. Image-oriented design control in China: a case study from Nanjing.
- Author
-
Chen, Fei
- Subjects
PLACE marketing ,URBAN planning ,BUILDING sites ,RAILROAD stations - Abstract
This paper investigates urban image-making through the lens of different sets of design control tools and mechanisms in use in the Chinese planning system before 2019. It takes the South Railway Station area of Nanjing, part of a planned new town, as the case study and examines the design and planning of the overall area, a sub-area and two selected building sites. The research offers an understanding of the performative role of urban planning in place promotion with its distinctive Chinese characteristics, which are related to the planning culture and socio-political context of China. The paper identifies a few problems resulting from an image-oriented approach to planning in the case studies. Firstly, planning strategies have stressed grandness as opposed to the human scale and wide spatial qualities. Secondly, the approach has emphasised marketability of urban images rather than the representation of socio-cultural values. The study suggests that place identity catering for the interests of ordinary citizens should be foregrounded in design control in new town development in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. Residents' Engagement Behavior in Destination Branding.
- Author
-
Zhao, Yuzong, Cui, Xiaotian, and Guo, Yongrui
- Abstract
Residents play an important role in the destination branding process. Extant studies have not yet integrated analyses of residents' engagement behavior and the factors that affect it. In this study, we investigated the influence of place identity, place brand identity, place brand commitment, and perceived benefits of tourism on residents' engagement behavior (brand ambassadorship behavior, brand citizenship behavior) in destination branding. Derived from a sample of 380 residents of Zhouzhuang, one of China's most important tourism destinations, the data for this research were analyzed using partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) using SmartPLS 3.3.2. The findings reveal that residents' emotions towards destinations and brands and the perceived benefits of tourism significantly positively influence brand ambassadorship behavior and brand citizenship behavior. Residents' engagement behavior in destination branding is influenced by mechanisms of social identity and social exchange. This study reveals the antecedents that affect residents' engagement behavior in destination branding. The results also provide comprehensive insight into residents' engagement behavior in destination branding based on social identity and social exchange theories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. 企业社区居民地方认同变化及作用机理 --以西北第一印染厂社区为例.
- Author
-
黄坤, 吴文恒, 杨毕红, and 史海金
- Abstract
"Place identity" is an important concept that measures personal place emotion and reflects the complicated dynamic relationship between personal identity and one's local environment. Enterprise communities (ECs) are a major type of gated, walled-off residential spaces. They were built and managed mostly by the state or collectively owned enterprises during the planning economy period, and many are still employed in urban China. Understanding the place identity of EC residents is of great significance for community renewal, neighborhood revitalization, and sustainable urban development. Using the Northwestern First Printing and Dyeing Factory community as a typical example, this paper uncovers the changes and mechanisms of personal place identity under the influence of social environment changes and community transformation using grounded theory, while discussing its policy implications. The main results are as follows: first, 13 open coding items, such as cognitive change of identity, reduced familiarity, weakened social interaction, and dilapidated housing construction were defined; further, four axial codings, including personal identity changes, emotional memory changes, identity change in social life, and physical environment identity, were set, and an analysis framework on the change of residents' place identity in the ECs (selective coding) was built. Second, the residents' personal awareness in ECs has changed from Danwei people in the era of planned economy to social people in the market economy period and to left-behind elderly groups in the future. Third, inherited collective memory maintains the residents' positive place identity. Alienation of social interaction and socialization of community management weaken place identity. The dilapidated material environment and backward support facilities cause the residents to experience negative identity. Fourth, residents build their own and local identity in the interaction between the EC environment and society that accompanies their life and growth, and the identity changes along with the variation of external social environment and internal individual characteristics. External factors such as stateowned enterprise reform and housing policies have led to enterprise transitions and changes in social space in the ECs, affecting residents' emotional experience and identity. Internal factors such as length of residence, individual characteristics, psychological factors, and individual experiences all have an effect on identity. These jointly shape the residents' place identity and can alter its processes. Finally, this work is helpful in providing insight into socialist work-unit communities for Chinese transformation and renewal, deepens the understanding of traditional residential space succession theory arising from residential suburbanization, residential segregation, inner-city renewal, gentrification, and polarization of living space, enriches the case types of place identity theory in view of the unique value and function of the ECs, and provides a reference to carry out the renewal of old communities more successfully. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Place identity and careers in regional Australia.
- Author
-
McIlveen, Peter, Alchin, Carolyn, Hoare, P. Nancey, Bowman, Sarah, Harris, Rebecca, Gotting, Geraldine, Gilmour, John, Perera, Harsha N., Beccaria, Lisa, Kossen, Chris, Cavaye, Jim, Creed, Allison, and McDonald, Nicole
- Subjects
JOB satisfaction ,LIFE satisfaction ,CAREER development ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HUMAN resources departments - Abstract
Emerging public discourse about making a "tree change", "green change", or "sea change" emphasizes the putative benefits of working and residing in regional Australia. Yet, attracting and retaining workers in the regions is a challenge for policymakers, governments, and industries. The present research involved two separate surveys of people residing in regional Australian communities to discern demographic and psychological predictors of their intent to stay in their region: income, years in the region, family, life satisfaction, job satisfaction, and place identity. Multiple regression analyses found incremental evidence of place identity as a predictor of intent to stay. The findings regarding place identity have implications for career development practice, human resources recruitment strategies, and public policy focused on regional Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Territories and Landscapes: Place Identity, Quality of Life and Psychological Well-Being in Rural Areas
- Author
-
Ferrari, Maria Gabriella, Bocci, Elena, Lepisto, Erika, Cavallero, Paola, Rombai, Leonardo, Michalos, Alex C, Series Editor, Diener, Ed, Editorial Board Member, Glatzer, Wolfgang, Editorial Board Member, Moum, Torbjorn, Editorial Board Member, Sprangers, Mirjam A.G., Editorial Board Member, Vogel, Joachim, Editorial Board Member, Veenhoven, Ruut, Editorial Board Member, Bianco, Adele, editor, Conigliaro, Paola, editor, and Gnaldi, Michela, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. Aegina’s Pistachio as a Cultural Resource for the Development and Promotion of the Island
- Author
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Chatzina, Konstantina, Kavoura, Androniki, editor, Kefallonitis, Efstathios, editor, and Giovanis, Apostolos, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
243. Heimat und mentale Gesundheit: Wie place identity unser Heimatgefühl und Wohlbefinden beeinflusst
- Author
-
Lengen, Charis, Kühne, Olaf, Series Editor, Kinder, Sebastian, Series Editor, Schnur, Olaf, Series Editor, Hülz, Martina, editor, and Weber, Florian, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. Pride of Place in a Religious Context: An Environmental Psychology and Sociology Perspective
- Author
-
Bonaiuto, Marino, Albers, Thomas, Ariccio, Silvia, Cataldi, Silvia, Counted, Victor, editor, and Watts, Fraser, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Residents' Perceived and Expected Value of Linear Cultural Heritage: The Example of the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway
- Author
-
Li Fei, Ma Jigang, and Liu Xianghui
- Subjects
linear cultural heritage ,yunnan-vietnam railway ,place identity ,perceived value ,expected value ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
The protection, activation, and utilization of the cultural heritage has attracted increasing attention from the international community. Cultural heritage is an important carrier for inhabitants to promote their local identity and express the emotions and geographical memory of local communities. The Linear Cultural Heritage Yunnan-Vietnam Railway, which once played an important historical role, is at the critical point between decline and revival. With its traffic and economic function declining daily, its heritage value is gradually being manifested in people's nostalgic mood and emotional recall. By investigating residents' perceived and expected value of the cultural heritage at several important stations along the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway, this paper explores the realistic basis of value reconstruction and excavates the multiple values of the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway, which can contribute to the scientific protection and sustainable utilization of the linear cultural heritage of the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway. The survey covers such issues as the economy, transportation, culture, society, ecology, tourism, spiritual attribution, local identity, and international contacts. By comparing the data collected using the Richter scale, the paper explores the differences between the twelve common factors of perceived value and expected value. It was found that the local identity of the residents along the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway is mainly reflected in the functional turn, value reproduction, and tourism development; the perceived value and expected value of the residents along the railway are identical, and there are obvious differences,which are embodied in five aspects: frontier stability, economic development, international trade, ecological environment and national integration. The research concludes that: First, the residents along the railway consistently affirm the cultural heritage value of the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway, expressing an optimistic and supportive attitude toward its future functional turn, value reproduction, and tourism development. Second, the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway is a common element of the local memories of residents along the line, the source and symbol of their common cultural and local identities. The protection and utilization of the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway is a continuation of the local context that will greatly enhance the national spirit. Finally, the residents have different expectations for the future development of the railway. The overall utilization of the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway is not equal to sustaining the development of the whole railway. Attention should thus be focused on the sections with better resource conditions and foundations for tourism. The theme of the whole railway should be unified, and an international tourism route can be opened jointly with Vietnam at an appropriate time.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. The indirect experience of nature: biomorphic design forms in servicescapes
- Author
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Kumar, Deepak S., Purani, Keyoor, and Viswanathan, Shyam A.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Combining participatory action research with sociological intervention to investigate participatory place branding
- Author
-
Ripoll Gonzalez, Laura and Gale, Fred
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. What determines residents’ commitment to a post-communist city? A moderated mediation analysis
- Author
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Tournois, Laurent and Rollero, Chiara
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. 5 Questions for Javier Fuentes
- Author
-
Johnson, Michelle
- Subjects
Place identity ,Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) ,Literature/writing - Abstract
Javier Fuentes's debut novel, Countries of Origin, finds pastry chef Demetrio leaving the US and returning to his birth country, Spain. On the flight to Madrid, he meets Jacobo, which [...]
- Published
- 2023
250. The Significance of Traditional Urban Public Spaces in Sustaining Place Identity in the Urban Landscape of Kerala.
- Author
-
Ashfina, T., Garg, Pushplata, and Chani, P. S.
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC spaces , *CULTURAL landscapes , *PORT cities , *GROUP identity , *SOCIAL cohesion , *DEPERSONALIZATION , *PLACE attachment (Psychology) - Abstract
Many studies have found that a loss of place identity in urban landscapes causes a slew of social, cultural, and psychological problems. The significance of traditional urban public spaces in sustaining place identity in a cultural landscape is discussed in this paper, which employs a statistical model tailored to Kerala, specifically Calicut, and is applicable via questionnaire research. The study begins with a look at the historical context and current trends in Calicut, the state's first port town and second-most populous city. The primary goal of this study is to clarify the relationship between people and their physical environment while considering the concept of place-identity and how urban public spaces, with their unique characteristics and features, contribute to physical setting cognitions and shape place identity with a focus on Calicut. The results were obtained through field surveys. The survey had 424 participants selected using a random sampling strategy. Users are observed to have a diverse set of social and cultural traits. This study, however, only considers users who have a consistent engagement with the location including shop owners, residents, etc. The theory of urban spatial designs that play an important role in enhancing identity, specifically the factors influencing place-identity in traditional urban public spaces based on Place Identity social cohesion, and, Place Dependence will be examined in this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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