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The Paradox of Kenyan Slum Upgrading Programme - An interpretative case study about socio-spatial exclusion in the informal settlement of KiberaRupprecht, Melina January 2020 (has links)
This interpretative case study examines the ways in which socio-spatial exclusion is main-tained though urban planning designs in the informal settlement of Kibera in Kenya. It ap-plies the theoretical and analytical framework of T. Mitchell and A. Church, M. Frost, K. Sullivan to investigate how the urban design of the Kenyan Slum Upgrading Programme (KENSUP) contributes to the maintenance of socio-spatial hierarchies that allow for the ex-clusion of Kibera’s urban residents. This investigation is a reaction to the lacking considera-tion of implanted structural violence in place and urban development.The study found that persisting socio-spatial exclusion of residents in Kibera is in-deed sustained through KENSUP. The built environment functions as power medium that excludes some people based on their socio-spatial status in the city. The applied framework confirmed that the urban planning programme KENSUP maintains existing forms of eco-nomic, physical, and geographic exclusion, besides the exclusion from facilities through the built environment.The findings suggest that urban planning designs require a shift from the focus on the built environment towards the focus on human rights and inclusive participation in order to reduce the structural influence of socio-spatial city hierarchies.
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ESPAÇOS COTIDIANOS DAS PESSOAS COM DEFICIÊNCIA: CONTRIBUIÇÃO PARA UMA GEOGRAFIA DA DEFICIÊNCIA BRASILEIRALombardi, Anna Paula 20 April 2018 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2018-04-20 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / As Pessoas com Deficiência (PcD) foram por muito tempo consideradas incapazes e estigmatizadas pela sociedade. Preconceitos e discriminações as excluíam do convívio com os demais, repercutindo diretamente nas formas de interações e vivências destas em seus espaços cotidianos. Na contemporaneidade, a deficiência é considerada um atributo da pessoa e faz parte de sua diversidade, portanto, as PcD têm os mesmos direitos e deveres dos demais cidadãos. Desta forma, essas vêm se organizando na luta por maior oportunidade na sociedade e, consequentemente, melhor qualidade de vida. Mesmo havendo avanços e mudanças positivas na vida das PcD, as transformações são lentas e a maior parte delas ainda vivem excluídas em termos socioespaciais. Esta percepção da realidade das PcD é fruto de investigações de diversas áreas de conhecimento, entre elas a Geografia. Os estudos da chamada Geografia da Deficiência (Geography of Disability) são muito difundidos nos países anglófonos, contudo ausentes no cenário da produção geográfica brasileira. Tais estudos mostram que as PcD não têm as mesmas oportunidades de acesso à educação, ao sistema de saúde, a empregos e à moradia. É com este contexto que essa tese, ouvindo pessoas com diferentes deficiências, busca construir as bases de sustentação para a construção de uma Geografia da Deficiência brasileira, articulando-se em torno da seguinte questão: De que modo as PcD interagem com e em seus espaços de vida cotidiana? Parte-se do pressuposto que as PcD são protagonistas, ou seja, entendem e interferem naquilo que se passa em seu cotidiano. Para tanto, se fez uso de uma metodologia construída a partir da chamada Fotoprovocação ou Elicitação associada a entrevistas em profundidade qualitativa primária (Photographic Elicitation Interviewing - PEI). As entrevistas se estruturam nos quatro modos de interação - interpretativo, valorativo, operacional e responsivo - propostos pelo psicólogo ambiental Stokols (1978). São analisados três grupos distintos de PcD: cadeirantes, cegos e surdos. A pesquisa se desenvolve a partir das experiências das PcD em Ponta Grossa, cidade brasileira de porte médio localizada a cerca de 100 km de Curitiba, capital do estado sulista do Paraná. A opção metodológica, todavia, não é focar no caso de Ponta Grossa, mas sim proporcionar uma reflexão mais ampla a partir das vivências das PcD desta cidade. Busca-se retratar como as pessoas interagem em estruturas deficientes, ou seja, invertendo-se a lógica hegemônica da pessoa para as estruturas. Portanto, entende-se que para se alcançar espaços adequados com características de inclusão torna-se necessário um esforço programado tanto das PcD para suas próprias questões, como também da sociedade e do Estado. / For a long time society has regarded disabled persons as incapable and stigmatized. Prejudice and discrimination have excluded them from being together with the others, with consequences for a direct impact on their forms of interactions and conviviality in their everyday spaces. Nowadays, disability is considered a characteristic of a personality and part of a scenario of diversity, so that disabled persons have gained the same rights and obligations as all the other citizens. Thus, also disabled persons have started to organize themselves in fighting for better opportunities in society and, consequently, for a better life quality. But even if improvements and advances can be perceived in the life of disabled persons, changes are slow and a major portion of them is still experiencing socio-spatial exclusion. This observation is the result of research in different areas of knowledge, among them geography. Studies on the subject of the so-called Geography of Disability are already common in Anglophone countries; however, similar studies are missing in the Brazilian environment. In general, these studies reveal that, still today, disabled persons do not have the same opportunities as others, for example in the fields of access to education, acceptance in the health system, work and housing. In this context, the dissertation has heard individuals with different disabilities to elaborate an epistemological base for a Brazilian Geography of Disabilitiy accepting the following challenge: In what ways do disabled persons interact with and in their everyday spaces? Based on the assumption that disabled persons are the protagonists of their own life and, as such, understand what is happening in their everyday environment, a methodology has been used that provokes their ideas through profound qualitative interviews by the demonstration of photographies (Photographic Elicitation Interviewing – PEI). The interviews are structured in four different modes of interaction: interpretation, valorization, operation, and response, as proposed by the environmental sociologist Stokols (1978). Three distinct groups of disabled persons have been analyzed: wheelchair users, blind and deaf persons. The research process fhas been centered on experiences of disabled persons in Ponta Grossa, a medium-sized Brazilian city which 100 kilometers distant from Curitiba, the capital of the South Brazilian State of Paraná. The methodological option, however, was not restricted to this place, but also involves reflections on experiences of a wider range. Therefore, the main question has been to understand the deficiencies of structures, or, to put more bluntly, to invert the hegemonic question of the “disability” of persons to better focus on the “disability” of structures. Therefore, it should be understood that only an organized approach of both the disabled person him- or herself in understanding his/her own situation as well as efforts from the wider society and the state make it possible to establish adequate spaces with inclusive characteristics.
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