changing places Flashcards by Hester Bowes-Smith (2024)

1

Q

Geographical concept of place has which 3 aspects?

A

Location, Locale, Sense of Place

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2

Q

Location

A

where a place is on a map, its latitude or longitude coordinates

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3

Q

Locale

A

each place is made up of a series of locales or settings where everyday life activities take place, such as an office, a park, a home or a church. These settings affect social interactions and help forge values, attitudes and behaviour- we behave in a particular way in these places, according to social rules we understand. oGeographers agree that a locale need not be tied to a particular physical location , so a vehicle or an internet chat room may be a locale that structures interactions between people

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4

Q

John Agnew 1987 quote on locale

A

‘locale means not just the mere address but where of social life and environmental transformations’

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5

Q

Sense of Place

A

this refers to the subjective and emotional attachment people have to a place. This may be completely different when looked at from another’s perspective

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6

Q

Glastonbury example (e.g. could use for a 4 marker)

A

location: country of somerset, 23 miles south of Bristol, dry point on the low-lying somerset levels
locale: home to a number of visitors attractions including Glastonbury Abbey and Glastonbury Tor- young Christ visited
othe national trust describes Glastonbury Tor as being ‘a spiritual magnet for centuries, for both Pagans and Christians’
sense of place: a place of great spiritual importance for people interested in paganism, religious or the King Arthur link
oOthers: Glastonbury evokes emotions about the internationally famous music festival about the internationally famous music festival which takes place at Worthy farm in Pilton on the edge of Glastonbury
oFirst festival took place in June 1970, it was attend by 1500 people and cost £1 with free milk from the farm

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7

Q

Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz quote

A

‘There’s no place like home, there’s no place like home…’

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8

Q

Yi-Fu Tuan’s approach to place

A

NAME?

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9

Q

Topophilia

A

A strong attachment to a place

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10

Q

Yi Fu Tuan 1974 quote

A

‘the human love of a place… diffuse as a concept, vivid, concrete as personal experience’

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11

Q

Topophobia

A

a dread or adverse reaction to a place

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12

Q

Ted Relph 1976

A

To be human is to live in a world that is filled with significant places’

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13

Q

Descriptive approach

A

This is the idea that the world is a set of places and each place can be studied and is distinct

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14

Q

A social constructionist approach

A

sees place as a product of a particular set of social processes occurring at a particular time.
For example, Trafalgar Square was built to commemorate a British naval victory in the 1800s and, using a social constructionist approach, could be understood as a place of empire and colonialism.

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15

Q

A phenomenological approach (Yi-Fu Tuan and Ted Relph)

A

interested in how an individual person experiences place, recognising a highly personal relationship between place and person

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16

Q

Ralph approach

A

Ralph argues that the degree of attachment, involvement and concern that a person or group has for a particular place is critical in our understanding of place.

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17

Q

Doreen Massey approach (Sense of place)

A

Places are dynamic, with multiple identities and no boundaries. They are constantly changed and moulded by the outside influences of the wider world.
E.g. The result of lived experience in a nation e.g. little Chalfont

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18

Q

Cultural approach - Jon Anderson

A

Places are given meaning by the traces that exist in them- physical traces such as
● Material traces are physical additions to the environment and include things such as buildings, signs and statues.
● Non-material traces include events, performances or emotions which occur in that place.
e.g. Glastonbury is given meaning by the Glastonbury music festival.

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19

Q

Example of concept of place/ changing places

A

Trafalgar Square, the traces are the statue of Lord Nelson and a large public square.- behind them social constructionists - commemorate Nelson’s naval victory - commemoration of British leadership and victory - can be understood as a space of Empire- a place of pride and patriotism. Today the square is still used to celebrate victory - e.g. Olympics. 4th plinth used to change place meanings - innovation and diversity. Also used for protests

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20

Q

Protests related to place

A

In London, from 2018 onwards, climate change activists, led by Extinction Rebellion, held peaceful protests centred around Parliament Square.

-the activists used the power of place to attract attention and lodge their message in people’s memories

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21

Q

Example of changing place- 9/11 memorial , NY

A

-All places are changing, but few have gone through such dramatic changes in the last 15 years as Ground Zero, the site of the former world trade centre in NY
-Different views on memorial – some say is beautiful , others its cold, stark and uncomfortable

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22

Q

Person-Place relationship

A

people define themselves through a sense of place and by living in place and carrying our a range of everyday practice there

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23

Q

Lived experience has 3 aspects.

A

NAME?

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24

Q

Identity at different scale

A

Localism, Regionalism, Nationalism, Globalism. A person may think of their indentity as layers, that derive from distinct aspect of their family history, upbringing and experience

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25

Q

Localism

A

an affection for or emotional ownership of a particular place.

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26

Q

Examples

A

NAME?

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27

Q

Regionalism

A

consciousness of, and loyalty to, a distinct region with a population that shares similarities

Examples
- In Cornwall, the Mebyon Kernow party has been leading the campaign for a National Assembly for Cornwall - because Cornwall has it own distinct identity- language- and heritage - has the same right to self-rule as other parts of the UK (like Scotland and Wales)

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28

Q

Nationalism

A

loyalty and devotion to a nation, which creates a sense of national consciousness. Patriotism could be considered as an example of a sense of place.

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29

Q

Examples- nationalism

A

At a national level many people identify with place through:
● a common language
● a national anthem
● a flag
● cultural and sporting events.
A resurgence in the Welsh language and culture has highlighted a stronger national identity among the Welsh in recent years.

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30

Q

Doreen Massey/Global sense of place/ Globalism

A

The economic and social geographer Doreen Massey wrote about a global sense of place, in which she questioned the idea that places are static.
She argued instead that places are dynamic, they have multiple identities and they do not have to have boundaries.

Massey argued that the character of a place can only be seen and understood by linking that place to places beyond. She concluded, ‘What we need, it seems to me, is a global sense of the local, a global sense of place.’

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31

Q

Examples/ globalisation dangers

A

  • globalisation has made place hom*ogenised (shown by increase of global chains)
    -‘geography of nowhere James Kunstler
  • clone towns (4/10 in the UK)
  • placelessness (the idea that a place could be anywhere and lacks uniqueness)
  • occurs when global forces have greater influence on shaping place than local factors.

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32

Q

Response to Globalisation

A

One particular response to globalisation has been a greater focus on ‘local’ place and the promotion of local goods and services.

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33

Q

Example- Totnes

A

  • 2012, Costa tried to come to Totnes - within weeks of the proposal , 3/4s of the population had signed a petition that they would boycott it (prevent it becoming a clone town). Costa dropped plans after 8 month battle. Did not want Totnes to become a clone town (8/10 shops are independent.
  • Totnes in South Devon created a local currency in 2007 (ended in 2019)

34

Q

Example- Bristol

A

  • The Bristol Pound was launched in 2012 . In 2020, trying to launch an e wallet (limited success and development)

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35

Q

Religious identity

A

Religion, too, can be used to foster a sense of identity in place
At a local level, churches, mosques and synagogues are places where people from the same religious identity come together to worship. There may also be larger sacred places such as Bethlehem or Mecca where people go on pilgrimages.

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36

Q

Examples of changing identities

A

Changes in the nature of places- be they social, enviro or economic- affect people and their identity
football fans after their national team losing a match
if a major employer or injury fails, those made redundant will miss the social interactions associated with the locale of the factory or office and must re-evaluate their role in society

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37

Q

Sahaviriya Steel 2015

A

announced the closure of Redcar Steelworks in NE England with a loss of 1700 job

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38

Q

What did Tata do in 2016?

A

Announced its intention to sell its entire UK business- this would result in the loss of a further 1200 jobs in the north east and 4000 at Port Talbot in South Wales

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39

Q

How did this change the indentites?

A

result in community members increased awareness of themselves as people living in a particular place

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40

Q

Activism as a result of identity

A

-Greater consciousness of and loyalty to a place (localism, regionalism, nationalism, patriotism, eve pro-Europeanism) may lead to some form of activism

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41

Q

Examples

A

2011, Tahrir Square in Cairo was the focal point of the Egyptian revolution against former president Hosni Mubarak. Despite the banning of public protests in Egypt, the square became a symbol for the pursuit of democracy in Egypt.

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42

Q

Belonging

A

  • To belong is to be part of a community.
  • The extent to which one might feel a sense of belonging can be influenced by factors like age, gender, ethnicity, race, socio-economic status, religion, and level of education.

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43

Q

The importance of belonging in placemaking/regeneration

A

  • Belonging is increasingly seen as one of the key factors that makes a place sustainable and successful.
  • Regeneration schemes now often focus as much on the social environment as on the built environment and the work of different agencies and individuals can have a positive impact on people’s lived experience of the place in which they live

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44

Q

Impact of globalisation on belonging (synoptic link)

A

Migration has increased making places more ethnically and culturally diverse- e.g. London (largest Chinese New Year Festival outside China and other festivals).

In spite of its multicultural status, there are still minority ethnic clusters in parts of London, including Chinatown in Soho and Banglatown in and around Brick Lane. These have tended to develop, with dedicated shops and services, for mutual support and cultural preservation.- may not feel belonging? or helps them feel belonging?

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45

Q

The Transition Time Movement

A

places emphasises community involvement and has developed a clearer sense of belonging in places all over the world. Founded in 2007- in response to climate change and peak oil, now responds to globalisation (and dilution of place identity)-» over 1000 Transition initiatives worldwide

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46

Q

Wellbeing

A

Features which promote happiness and well-being in a place - depend on positionality

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47

Q

Manchester

A

In 2020, the Sunday Times deemed Altrincham in Greater Manchester as the best place to lived due to its revitalised town centre, schools and proximity to Dunham Massey - a National Trust property and park) and the tons initial response to the COVID 19 pandemic

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48

Q

Placemaking

A

Placemaking- The deliberate shaping of an environment to facilitate social interaction and improve a community’s quality of life

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49

Q

Important of place and human experience in place making

A

The placemaking movement, which has expanded rapidly in recent years, places great emphasis on all three aspects (identity, belonging and wellbeing)

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50

Q

Examples of placemaking

A

● The promotion of place is crucial in the marketing of holiday destinations.
● Food items are increasingly marketed in terms of the place from which they came, and the popularity of events may be linked to the reputation of the place at which they happen. The Glastonbury Music Festival would be an example here.
● People may ‘buy into’ or ‘consume’ place. For example, those who like the countryside tend to holiday in rural locations, enjoy books and television programmes about these areas, spend money on walking gear and maps and even furnish their houses in a rustic country style. Numerous products are marketed so that people can buy into the notion of the rural idyll.

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51

Q

Social and spatial exclusion

A

All places are shaped by people and understood by them in different ways
It follows that anybody whose behaviour varies from what is seen as normal may feel uncomfortable
The dominant groups, who have economic, social, and cultural power in a location or a society, may make such ‘wrongdoers’ feel out of place.

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52

Q

Example of people, activities and events can be seen as in place or out of place

A

NAME?

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53

Q

Example 2- Women

A

Gender roles - ‘a women’s place is in the home’ - affected types of places women felt comfortable

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54

Q

Example 3 - Migrants

A

people without place- In the UK , media reports, and anti migration group use metaphors (water, blood and disease) to describe the influx of refugees.

Deaths of migrants in the Mediterranean highlight how government aren’t in charge of people not in their place as such

Presence of migrants has met with great resistance and calls from some to protect ‘our place’ and ‘our culture’ against people who do not belong here

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55

Q

What are geographers interested in?

A

interested in finding out about groups in society that are excluded not spatially but also socially, politically, or economically and the reasons for this separation. – e.g. immigrants; local nationals, but feel separate from it).
oThere is a greater need to understand why people feel out of place due to the influx of immigrants from other countries

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56

Q

Tim Cresswell on insider and outside perspectives

A

argues that people, things and practices are strongly linked to particular places and when these links are broken, they are deemed to have committed something of a crime
- e.g. graffiti on historic buildings or litter in AOOB

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57

Q

Who may feel excluded?

A

ethnic minorities, immigrants, local nationals (born and brought up in a place but who feel separate from it).

Homeless people- made to feel like an outsider - anti homeless spikes in sheltered areas outside flats in Southwark, London

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58

Q

Insider perspectives

A

  • People who feel like they belong in a certain place and that is their home
  • Born in Country X or their parents were born there
  • Permanent resident
  • Holds a passport for X
  • Can work, vote, claim benefits like free housing and healthcare
  • Fluent in the local language
  • Understand unspoken rules of the society of X
  • Conforms to local norms
  • Safe, secure, happy- feels at home or ‘in place’ in country

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59

Q

Outsider perspective

A

  • People who feel out of place in a certain place and that they don’t belong
  • Not born in X, they are an immigrant/ or their parents or grandparents were immigrants
  • Temporary visitor
  • Holds a foreign passport/ or limited visa to stay in X
  • May not be able to work, vote, claim benefits
  • May be travelling for business/ in search of work, pleasure, safety ( an asylum seeker)
  • Not fluent. Does not understand local idioms
  • Frequently make faux paus or misunderstand social interactions
  • Homesick, in exile- feel ‘out of place’
    oIn the past, and often still today, this has included travellers, protestors, and lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people
    oMigrants are often referred to as ‘out of place’.

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60

Q

Sense of being an insider or an outsider

A

The significance that an individual or group attaches to a particular place may be influenced by feelings of belonging or alienation, a sense of being an insider or an outsider.

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61

Q

Relph 1976 quote

A

‘To be inside a place is to belong to it and identify with it, and the more profoundly inside you are the stronger is the identity with the place’

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62

Q

Positionality

A

factors such as a person’s gender, race, ethnicity, religion, politics, socioeconomic status, and sexuality may affect their perception of place.

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63

Q

Example of positionality affecting perspectives on place

A

Mecca, Saudi Arabia
- to Muslims - the holiest of religious places
- to non -Muslims- viewed as a more historical and cultural place

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64

Q

People may feel excluded due to negative experiences that create negative perception and limited attachment or people may also have a sense of belonging and positive perception of a place because of positive experiences there- example

A

the expected behaviours and norms associated with expensive or exclusive hotels or restaurants may make people from disadvantaged background feel alienated (e.g. exclusionary rules like dress codes)
OR
for those familiar with the routines , rituals and traditions of a place they will feel welcomed and thoroughly in place

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65

Q

Example of insider/outside perspectives

A

Asian and Black people excluded from Rural England
- numbers of black and asian people in the national trust or the ramblers is v small
- Historically migrants went to cities so they have little connection to the rural idyll
- A project called Mosaic builds links between black and ethnic minorities and the national parks and YHA etc
- What is the rural idyll?
- after the decline of the industrial north, London became more important but very polluted- national propaganda advertised the countryside as an ideal Britain. - shown by John Constables Hay Wain

White people excluded from inner urban areas?
- for example, Tower Hamlets - % of the population who are Asian origin is larger than the percentage of the white British
- 2021- 39.4% white, 44% Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh

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66

Q

Xenophobia and racism

A

People actively compare themselves with others who live in distant places , specifically those who they feel are different, alien or exotic
‘us’ and ‘them’
- whinging poms - Australian name for the English
-On the international stage, racist ideologies have been used to justify atrocities committed in wars and by colonial powers, including the British

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67

Q

Different approach to ‘us’ and ‘them’

A

The inspiration for the international Fairtrade movement has been to reduce inequalities between us and them, approaching growers and producers, wherever they are located, with greater respect

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68

Q

Doreen Massey quote (approach to the other)- use in a 20 marker

A

‘if history is about time, Geography is about space… space is the dimension of the simultaneous.. this means that space is the dimension that presents us with the existence of the other. Space presents us with the question of ‘how are we going to live together’ – MASSEY

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69

Q

Near and Far places

A

  • They could refer to the geographical distance between places
  • Equally, they could describe the emotional connection with a particular place and how comfortable a person feels within that place.
  • ‘near’ places today do not necessarily foster identities of familiarity and belonging due to globalised culture, travel and media-
  • Far places not so far and far-off places are not automatically strange, uncomfortable, and different.

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70

Q

Friction of distance/ globalisation

A

If we use a faster method of travel or if we use the internet to maintain contact with people in distant places, perhaps this division of the world begins to break down – as the so called friction of distance is overcome

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71

Q

Levy 2014 quote

A

With the forces of globalisation, some geographers propose that space is reducing in importance and that ‘the Near is often an expanding domain’ – Levy 2014

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72

Q

Experienced places

A

Some places feel more familiar than others partly due to personal experience
Today people travel a lot. We have access to faster transport and have more leisure time
You may feel a deeper emotional attachment to a place that you have visited in person and felt you understood, than somewhere you heard about on the news
‘You had to be there’
- environmental stimuli (all sense)

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73

Q

Media

A

We cannot go everywhere, so we depend on media representations of some places to help us make sense of the world- do we really gain a sense of place?!

In the so called ‘information age’, we are bombarded with images and other forms of representation of the world

The ‘reality’ of a place can be far different to that put across by the media and this is most clearly seen through the portrayal of rural places.

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74

Q

Media portrayal example - rural living

A

o- stereotyped as a happy, healthy and close-knit community with few problems of urban life – was idyllised
o- Doc Martin
o- Postman Pat
oReinforce the stereotypes with focusing on more nostalgic images of the countryside
oAdvertising companies hides a host of problems – which disadvantage low income household sin rural areas
Unemployment and underemployment
The scarce availability of affordable housing
The reduction in public transport services
Rural homelessness

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75

Q

Media portrayal example - city living

A

oCities are often stereotyped in a negative way – economic, social deprivation, homelessness, crime, vandalism and pollution
oHowever, successful regeneration of urban areas has made city living far more attractive in recent decades

76

Q

Paris Syndrome

A

Paris syndrome is often defined as a “state of severe culture shock”.

Physical and psychological symptoms when Paris fails to live up to expectations have been known to include hallucinations, a rapid heart rate, dizziness and nausea.

Around 20 Japanese tourists are afflicted by the ailment each year.

77

Q

Media/Fiction books

A

  • Media/ Fiction books
    oResearchers suggest that some of the places that are most important to us today exist only in books, films, and games and our imagination
    oIt is worth noting that such fictional media places may be associated with a physical location
    oThe place that inspired the story or the location where it was films
    oE.g. fans of ‘Hobbiton’ can take a trip to the visitor attraction near Matamata, in Waikato, New Zealand

78

Q

Genius loci and planning

A

  • Town planners aim to evoke a sense of place
  • The term genius loci – is often used in planning to describe the key characteristic of a place with which new developments much concur
    oBy landscape architects, who design public spaces. Landmarks for councils, national parks ad multi national organisation
  • However, the idea that every place has a true nature is a matter of some debate
  • Massey, Peter Jackson and others have written about the way in which all place meanings have been socially constructed
  • They assert that the most widely held meanings benefit, and are reproduced by the most powerful groups in society
  • Different people notice different things about the same place and react differently to it
  • A single place may create Topophilia in some people and Topophobia in others – e.g. the landscape of a National Park
  • So, perhaps a direct experience of a place is not a s important as you might have first thought

79

Q

Character place

A

Character of place- the physical and human features that help to distinguish it from another place
Many aspects of local, regional, national and international geography influence character of place

80

Q

Endogenous fatcors list

A

Endogenous: location, topography, physical geography, land use, built environment and infrastructure, demographic and economic characteristics.

81

Q

endogenous

A

  • Character is linked to natural and cultural features in the landscape and the people in the place
  • endogenous - are those that originate internally and may include aspects of the site or land on which the place is built

82

Q

  • Location

A

ourban or rural?
oProximity to other settlements
oMain roads
oPhysical features – rivers , coast

83

Q

  • Topography

A

oHills or mountains, height, relief etc..
oPhysical geography
oRelief, altitude, aspect, drainage, soil and rock type (geology)
oExample – Aberdeen (Granit City) vs village of Abbotsbury ( limestone) in Dorset
oBoth areas use local stones to build houses – gives the built environment a particular colour and contributes to its character

84

Q

  • Land use

A

oAgricultural area, urban, industrial?

85

Q

  • Built environment

A

oAge of type of housing – Georgian Edwardian, Victorina etc
oBuilding density
oBuilding materials – example
o‘Derbyshire is rugged. Dorset is quaint’
oDorset- thatched homes, Peak District – ‘robust and simple’ ‘plain’ housing

86

Q

  • Infrastructure

A

oMotorways or single track lanes
oRail connections
oDistance to airport

87

Q

  • Demographic

A

oPop size and structure – ageing or youthful pop, ethnicity?
oAge, employment status, education, home ownership – census data

88

Q

  • Economic characteristics

A

oPrimary, secondary, tertiary or quaternary industries
oEmployment opportunities
oEducational attainment and opportunities
oIncome
oMobility of the population to work

89

Q

  • Others - endoegnous

A

  • Social
    oHealth
    oCrime rates
    oLocal clubs and societies
    oAmenities
  • Cultural factors
    oHeritage, religion, language
    oDialects- ‘Ay up mi duck’ – Derbyshire
    oVary greatly in the UK – sense of place
    oBut also prompt a stereotyping of local people- hiding diversity
  • Political – role and strength of local councils or resident groups

90

Q

Changing influences- endogenous to exogenous

A

  • Some places may have an industrial story- others may have developed as agricultural places pr tourist resorts – had one distinct function (good defensive position, a bridging point, availability of natural resources, routes, trading centres)
  • As they have developed, exogenous factors become more important- initial functions diminish as tech advances

91

Q

exogenous

A

EXOGENOUS FACTORS – . are those that have an external cause or origin/ relationship with other places.

92

Q

list of flows - exogenous

A

People, Resources, Money and Investment, Ideas

93

Q

People

A

oFor example a village may supply workers to a nearby town or a town may be the source of day-trippers for a tourist destination
oMigration
UK became a multicultural society- problems- conflict, housing stress- changing character of the place
When in the EU, the UK welcomed immigrants from the other 27 member countries
Flows of people to the UK form the EU peaked at 1.5 million between 2004-2009
New cultures, food, music, ways of life-> change of character
Fish industries and farms benefitted from influx of chape labour
New shops on highstreets
Schools struggle to cope with number roc children with English as their second language
The pattern of migration in the UK (mostly into cities)
Also emigration – 2009 saw more national from the 8 central and eastern European state sleave the country than arrive – money department
Brexit
*Decline in immigrants will leave British industries previously dependant on the immigrant workforce having to pay more to attract British nationals – falling profits, jobs losses etc…, high prices- British exports less competitive and too pricey for Brits- failure of companies and more importing
oNew comers into a inner city- can led to gentrification- new character

94

Q

flows of people to the UK peaked at X million between what years

A

1.5 million, 2004-2009

95

Q

  • Resources

A

oOutsourcing resources- impacts mines in UK?

96

Q

  • Money and investment

A

oDeindustrialization, unemployment, economic restructuring, urban decline of traditional industrial cities – manufacturing as more overseas (sh*t I investment)
omining, steel and shipbuilding towns- changing character due to deindustrialisation

97

Q

Demographic characteristics of places shaped by flows

A

Demographic - age, gender, education, religion, birth rates, ethnicity, pop size
-People
oLocal
oglobal
-Money and Investment
oLocal
oNational
For example, the economic rise and fall of British industrial cities in the nineteenth and twentieth century and the impact this had on their population and environment.
oGlobal
British seaside resorts have also undergone significant change in the last sixty years as they have had to adapt to increasing numbers of British people travelling abroad for their holidays.
-Resources
oLocal
oGlobal
-Ideas
oLocal
oNational
The Government One Child Policy in China , implemented in 1980 and ended in 2016 to reduce growh rate
Incentives were offered to families ocmplyign with the policy- financia perks, greater employment options
Impact
*FR and BR decreased
*Natural increase declined
*400 million births prevented by the policy
*Overall sex ratio skewed toward males – preference of sons- more abortions for females , andoning or orphans
*Even after the one-child policy was rescinded, China’s birth and fertility rates remained low, leaving the country with a population that was aging too rapidly as well as a shrinking workforce.
*by 2050, older adults will account for more than one-third of the total population.
*
oGlobal

98

Q

Socio-economic characteristics

A

  • People
    oLocal
    oglobal
  • Money and Investment
    oLocal
    HS2 impacting Great Missenden and causing rising house prices
    Wembley regeneration project
  • Vision
    oNew stadium
    oCommunity focus
    oNational regional and local leisure destination
    oLonden Convention centre
    oCentre or work
    oCultural and educational centre
    oHigh quality retail
    oMixture of housing types and tenures
  • Brent has been able to secure over £2 billion of commercial investment into Wembley
  • Brent in2Work has supported on average 1000 Brent residents a year into work
  • The Council has secured planning consent for 500 new homes and work is underway on site
    o
    oNational
    oGlobal
    World Bank running 24 development projects in Haiti
  • Resources
    oLocal
    oGlobal
  • Ideas
    oLocal
    oNational – Iran’s media ban
    Internet has been shut off in parts of Tehran and Kurdistans-> regional
    Blocked access to Instagram and WhatApp to cubr the goriwng portets movement that relied on social media to document dissent
    “internet shutdowns must be understood as an extension of the violence and repression that is happening in physical space” – Azadeh Akbari (researched of cybersurveillance)
    Iranian government and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps persistently block social media
    often block Blogger, HBO, YouTube, Netflix
    by 2008, Iran had blocked access to over 5,000,000 websites as content deemed immoral and anti-social
    impact on character…
  • little or specified perception externally because people can’t see what’s actually happening

99

Q

Cultural characteristics

A

  • People
    oLocal
    oGlobal
    The British rule in India also led to the flow of British people to the subcontinent
  • This led to change in the demographic, which was mainly Hindu and Muslim, but now included Christians
  • The demographic also changed as more, Indians attended universities and attained qualification – this led to an increase in Indian professional and established an Indian Middle class
  • Money and Investment
    oLocal
    oNational
    oGlobal
    Coca Cola now the second most recognised word in the world
    KFC has westernised Japan and KFC on Christmas day is now a tradition after the 1974 campaign
  • Resources
    oLocal
    oGlobal
  • Ideas
    oLocal
    oNational
    One child policy left an impact that chnaged the culture- notion of what makes a women successful had chnaged
    1970s policy in Germany (as part of democratisation process) – ‘culutre for eveyone’
  • Encouraged more culture – arts made accessible for all members,
  • Litertaure, art, beer, suagues, pilioshoy
    oGlobal
    India, a predominantly Hindu country, has seen an increase of Christianity in the last decade
    Flow of the idea of westernisation to India due to British empire
  • English become the language used in courts and education and Christian English was taught
  • However, change is not always liked- native Indians felt forced into this ‘alien culture;
  • There was increasing resentment as Britain showed little respect for their religious sensitive and this led to the Indian Mutiny of 1857

100

Q

external forces - individuals - royal family

A

oRoyal family – King Charles
Poundbury, Dorset- more philanthropic
*Charles was patron as its on the dutchy of Cornwall land
*The foundation stone for this urban extension of 2500 dwelling to the west of Dorchester was laid by Charles in 1993
He is very outspoken on British architecture
*1984- new wing of national gallery – ‘monstrous carbuncle on the face of a much loved and elegant friend’
*National Theatre- ‘clever way of building a ncuealr power station in the middle of Lodnon without anyone objecting’
Principles
*Development must respect the land. They must not be intrusive, they should be designed to fit within the landscape they occupy
*Material also matter
*The pedestrian must be at the centre of the design process, streets must be reclaimed from the car

101

Q

external forces- individual- aristocrats

A

Joseph Damer – owner of Milton Abbey
Brown (influential landscape architect) – style of open grassland
In the 1770s- Brown helped Jospeh to create a place for the residents of Milton town to move into – moved the WHOLE TOWN – ‘spoiled the view’
With an act of Parliament he moved the grammar school to Blandford
He convinced the community of Milton to leave - he closed d roads to disrupt trade to force people to leave, flooded a property
Then the buildings were demolished and the town was moved south eats to create the village of Milton Abbas
oThe examples of Milton Abbas and Poundbury demonstrate that individuals within the aristocracy have, historically, wielded considerable power in the place-making process and, to some extent , Britain’s royal family still dose

102

Q

  • Local community groups

A

oCommunity or local groups may take an active role in managing and improving the perception of their place to attract investment and improve opportunities and services within the area.
oRegeneration and rebranding strategies have increasingly involved local people, since they have the ‘insider’ experience of place and will be the people most affected by any changes.
oResidents’ associations and heritage associations play an important role and social media is increasingly being employed to engage and involve local people in planning and place-making schemes

103

Q

New Era Estate

A

oNew Era Estate
The growing investment in London property by transnational corporations, like Westbrook Partners, and wealthy foreign individuals is recognised as fuelling a dramatic rise in house prices
Rents rising- gentrification
Local groups have become a force for change in housing policy in London – protested, social media, celebrities to further their cause
*Protestors from the new era estate outside the offices of US investment company Westbrook Partners, which threatened to increase their rents in 2014

104

Q

local and national gov

A

  • Local gov- British own currency
  • National gov- see policies in demographic/socio-economic/cultural
    oMay have introduced affordable housing- local people can remain in the are keeping close family links
    oRegeneration have cause gentrification, forcing out local people
    oMigration policies- cause different ethnic groups to move in – arrival of shops, religious buildings, traditions
    oRegeneration of Salford Quays and the policy of decentralisation have led to the relocation of the BBC at Media city – helped shape the present economic and demographic charter of Salford Quays

105

Q

  • Regional- external forces

A

  • Regional- EU investment in an area may have built a new road – cut down commuting time, increased employment opportunity

106

Q

  • National Institutions

A

oNational Trust – retaining past connections in character
5.37 million members- more than pop of Costa Rica
oreinforces notion of permanence and longevity
oWhat may appear to be a permanent or unchanging feature of a place, may in fact be a land use created by the economic power of aristocracy – due to social processes not acceptable today

107

Q

  • International Institutions

A

oInvestments of the WB in some slims areas- for example, Dkibouti Vile
oMajor Sporting events - these can transform communities and places, for example the East London 2012 Olympic Games had both positive and negative legacy effects, transforming one of the poorest districts of London but also forcing up rents and forcing out some of the poorest members of those communities.
oWorld Bank
In 2020, the World Bank was running 24 development projects in Haiti
Impact: Post-earthquake and hurricane reconstruction and reaction to COVID-19
oUN
Sustainable Development Goals
for example, the UN try to coordinate responses to disaster events such as post-earthquake reconstruction of both homes and communities, with a varied level of success around the world. This can have a direct impact on the character of places.

108

Q

  • TNCs- decision of TNCs

A

oMajor local impacts
Large companies have completely transformed places such as Shenzhen which has grown into an enormous city due to the relocation of manufacturing industries there
Similarly a loss of a TNC can have can change economic or demographic character
*Job losses, factories converted into housing

oE.g.
A new factory can cause a multiplier effect and created regeneration and more opprunties

e.g. when Honda first came to Swidnon
In 2019 Honda announced the closure of its Swindon factory to move production to China, Japan and the USA
*Job losses for employees and in the supply chain
*Uncertain future for the 380-acre factory site
*Left in 2021
In 2019, Tata Steel announced the closure of its site in Newport, South Wales due to competition from Chinese producers
*Job losses for Newport; steel production has been a major characteristic of the town since the 19th century

oGrowth of airline TNCs- put British seaside resorts out of business – more travelling abroad
o‘McDonaldisation of the world’

109

Q

Conflict can arise when people resist changes forced upon their place

A

  • e.g. The redevelopment of areas of East London for the 2012 Olympic Games was not welcomed by everybody and this can be seen with other redevelopment projects currently planned or taking place in London.
  • Proposed housing estates, landfill sites, wind farms and bypasses can all create tensions between different stakeholders.

110

Q

past and present processes -local scale

A

  • London
    o2012- BBC in collaboration with the Open University researched past and present condition of 6 London streets – used poverty maps of Charles Booth as a base and investigated the changing social and economic conditions of the residents who lived their
    oPortland Road, Notting Hill, considered in 2012, ‘the most gentrified street in the UK’ and home to some of London’s wealthier residents, was in 1899 the worst slum in London. In contrast, Deptford High Street has gone from being the ‘Oxford Street of South London’ to ‘one of the poorest shopping streets in London, marooned amid 1970s housing blocks.’

111

Q

past and present processes- port sunlight

A

The examples look at changing places on a progressively larger scale.
They illustrate how the characteristics of places can be shaped by a very different range of factors, including people, resources, money and investment.
They also serve to show how past and present connections within and beyond localities can help shape places and the lives of the people who live there
Port Sunlight , The Wirral
-Shaped entirely by ideas of Wiliam Hesketh Lever
-Built as a garden village (‘garden city movement) from 1888 mon the western bank of the River Mersey
-He acuqeuired the site to build a new factory (shifting flows of money) for expanding his soap business with an adjing model village for his workers
-He championed the businedd model of ‘prosperoty sharing’ and instead of sharing the profits directly with his employees he provided them with high quality, sanitary, and spacious housing with social amntites and welfare prvosision in picturesque surroudnings
-Arts and carfts designed houses
-Community allotments
-Provided church, hospital, post office, fire statsion, schools, clubs, dinig halls and neo-clasical Lady Lever Art Gallery
-Present
oLever Brothers became Unilever ando ve the last 100 years has grown into a gkobal gaint prodcuign a huge range of goods – 95.52 billion value
-Past
oPort Sunlight chnaged very little
oNo longer primarily home of unilever emppyees, but great efforts are made ot maintain its original appearance and community feel
oIn 1966 almost 1,000 houses and most of the public buildings became Grade II listed and in 1978 the village was designated a Conservation Area.
oUnilever still has an interest in maintaining the character of Port Sunlight, and in 1999 they set up the Port Sunlight Village Trust (PSVT).
oWhilst Ellesmere Port and Liverpool, across the River Mersey, have experienced huge amounts of change from deindustrialisation to regeneration, the PSVT and the residents have gone to great efforts to maintain a self-sustaining village that is still true to the original ideals of William Lever

112

Q

Devonport, Plymouth

A

Devonport , Plymouth
-In contrast to Port Sunlight it has chnaged ocnsiderdbly due to external forces
-Originally a naval dockyard due to its location on the deep water natural habour Plymouth sound
-By 18th century one of the fastes rowing tows in the oc*ntry
-However, in 1952, the Navy requisitioned the town cenre as as torgae enclave and enclosed it with a 3m high wall – the community was split in two and displaced residents were rehoused in flats illsuited for family living
-Naval josb then continued to delcien- socio economic prorblmes
-On the up?
oShifting money and investment
oFrom 2001–11, Devonport benefited from the New Deal for Communities initiative which provided funding to improve some of the most deprived areas of the UK.
oThe scheme specified place-related outcomes such as addressing crime, community and housing, and people-related outcomes such as education, health and employment.
oCommunity groups such as the Pembroke Street Estate Management Board were heavily involved.
oThe dividing naval wall was removed, inter-war housing and flats demolished, and historical landmarks incorporated into the redevelopment of the area
oThe regeneration has also tried to attract a wider range of people with options for private or shared ownership and the availability of social housing.
oThe construction of Georgian-inspired homes in the ‘Village by the sea’ development has attracted people from higher socio-economic groups to Devonport
oThere are still pockets of deprivation within Devonport, but both quantitative and qualitative data show that the New Deal programme and other redevelopment projects have significantly changed and improved the area, with benefits to local residents.
oA major redevelopment of Devonport’s docks was announced in 2020 to create 600 jobs and future-proof the economy by allowing it to refit the latest nuclear submarines.

113

Q

Medellin, Columbia

A

Medellin, Columbia
-The city was associated with drugs and violence for a long time ‘most dangerous sicty in the world’
-The notorious drug lord Pablo Escobar wielded encomours power until he died in 1993
-Unemployment, crime, poverty widespread- social inequality
-BUT TODAY- Present connections
oHas become a model for urban regernation and sustianbel city planning through long term investment sin infrastructure \nd education
oCity panners reocngsied the need to make the city equally accesbile to all citizens
oIts long divided social classes are now more able to intrgetae in everyday eocnomci and educational acticies
-The city’s poorest, many of whom reside in shanty houses in the Aburra Valley, can now access the city’s booming economic centre courtesy of a series of outdoor escalators and a gondola system that carries people up and down the valley
-Additional innovations include:
-● a bus rapid transit system named Metroplus, with dedicated bus lanes
-● an extensive above-ground tram system
-● a city-wide ride-sharing program.
Emission-free transport has been promoted, and this has been helped by the EnCicla initiative, a free bike-sharing programme that offers an integrated alternative to the city’s public and mass transportation systems.
Education, social programmes and the public arts and culture budgets have all been increased to transform the lives of the most underprivileged residents in this city.
-There are still problems in Medellin. Poverty rates have fallen but inequality between rich and poor has increased and cultural and geographic barriers continue to limit social integration.
oCrime rates and gang violence remain high.
oHowever, change takes time and there is a great feeling of optimism within the city.

114

Q

Meaning

A

Meaning – Meaning relates to individual or collective perceptions of place.

115

Q

Representation

A

Representation – Representation is how a place is portrayed or ‘seen’ in society

116

Q

Sense of place/ attachment to place

A

  • For children, emotional attachment to place is the most important factor shaping place meaning and this is why ‘home’ is often their most important place
  • Why is the way humans perceive , engage with and form attachment to places important?
    o- connecting to ones’ surrounding environment establishes knowledge of and appreciation of its resources
    oSense of place supports the development of personal identity
    oA strong sense of place can inspire stewardship and understanding, and nurture empathy
  • Experiences develop our sense of place
    oPositive experience and enjoyment- can lead to a positive understanding of a place
    oPerceptions of a place depends on experience so are subjective
  • Media can develop attachment to place
  • Sense of place affects out perspectives and identity

117

Q

Perception of place

A

Perception of place – This is the way in which place is viewed or regarded by people. This can be influenced by media representation or personal experience.

118

Q

  • Our perception of place is shaped by

A

oAdvertisem*nts or tourist agency material
oLocal exhibitions of art, film and photography
oPoetry
oSong
oExample
Dartmoor National Park is colosley linked with nature, weilderness in different artsitc and literay works- Arthur Conan Doyle- Houdn of the Bskivilles
oExperiences
oMedia= perceptions of international places tend to be influenced more by the media than personal and direct experiences
oHistorical and political relationships or trading links

119

Q

Example- Belfast

A

  • Economic powerhouse, industrial city
  • Was once the largest producer of linen in the world
  • 30 years of conflict- The Troubles but since has undergone a sustained period of calm and substantial economic and commercial growth
  • Large scale redevelopment- different parts rebranded as ‘quarters’ and empahsie their unique hsitroy
  • Titanic Qaurter (where titanic was built) one of the largest browfiled redevelopment sites in Europe – more than 100 companies there- Microsoft etc..
    oHome to the Titianic Belfate Cntre visted by 4 million people from 145 counties
    oHome to the set of Game of Thrones – filmed in a former shipyard paint hall
  • Tourism- 2018- vsiitors contributed £4000 million to local economy
  • Therefore- Belfats managed to represent it self and change its international image and visitors are not put off by events that have gone before
  • Representation – City Council and Tourits Board
  • Representation- peace lines and walls that segregated protestants and catholic apart now feature murals , tourism , it is hoped that the walls will be taken down as community relations strengthen

120

Q

Agents of change

A

These are the people who impact on a place whether through living, working or trying to improve that place. Examples would include residents, community groups, corporate entities, central and local government and the media.

121

Q

  • Individual- Banksy

A

oExample
Based in a derelict seafront lido and billed as a ‘bemusem*nt park’, Banksy’s Dismaland featured artworks on themes including the apocalypse, anti-consumerism and celebrity culture.
Unlike other British seaside resorts like Margate in Kent, which has built up a more positive representation following the opening of the Turner art gallery, WestonSuper-Mare relies on its beaches and traditional seaside attractions for visitors.
Banksy’s work brought significant benefits to a resort which has experienced significant decline in the last few decades. It is estimated that an additional 150,000 people visited the town as a result of the attraction and they added £20 million to the local economy. More importantly, local tourist chiefs were delighted that it helped to put the place of Weston Super-Mare more firmly on the map.

122

Q

  • Government

A

oKeen to attract trade and investment into their countries so a postive place perception is therefore important at an international level
People more likely to live or work in a place with a good reputuaiton an positive image
oMarketing or public rleations PR companies may be employed by national and local government ot improve or create postive perceptions of place
Aim to sell a place
Advertising cmagins, websites, social media, newsletters, logo, billboards .promotion of event

123

Q

  • Corporate bodies

A

oInstitutions, business, non -proft enterprise, government agencies
oExample- Llandudo - New business like The Looking Glass ice cream Parlour created jobs (attracted investment) due to Alice in Wonderland place perception
oExample- Visit Britian- (non departmental public body funded by the Department for Digtial, Culture, Media and Sport)
2015 social media campign to give chinese name landmark across the country boosted torusit numbers
Visit Britain estimates that the campaign, on the Weibo and WeChat social media platform, reached nearly 300 million potential Chinese tourists
for every 22 additional Chinese visitors to Britain one additional UK job in tourism is created
oExample – airline and trian companies – artwork at statsion emerged ta the beginning of 20h century as companesi comissed posters , sometime sby famous artists, to sell the dleights of British coats and countryside and boost train passneegrs
o- CHANGING INDIVUDALs behaviour

124

Q

  • Local Gov

A

oExample
oRebrand of Llandudno in North Wales as Alice Town
Were alice in wonderland was based
On the 60th anniversity of the birth of Alice Liddel (the girl it was based on), the Conwy County Council commissioned 4 large wooden sculptures of characters from the book
Alice town trail
o2012- Pembrokeshire coast National Park authority – vintage inspired designed at the cardiff airports, UK railways and across London underground to increase tourism , very successful in attracting more poel to the area

125

Q

Community

A

  • Community
    oCommunity or local groups may take an active role in managing and improving the perception of their place to attract investment and improve opportunities and services within the area.
    oRegeneration and rebranding strategies have increasingly involved local people, since they have the ‘insider’ experience of place and will be the people most affected by any changes
    oResidents’ associations and heritage associations play an important role and social media is increasingly being employed to engage and involve local people in planning and place-making schemes
    oExample
    The Alice liddle innovative community enterpirse Ltd was founded with the eths ‘to firmly etsbalsih and market the Alcie in Wonderlan connection worlwide’
    All profts form trail linekd maps a nd apps were reinvested into community projects
    An annual Alice Day
    oExample- #theafricathemedianevershowsyou- crowdsource cmapig – to show lived experienced
  • Monarchy plays a pivatol role in promoting international rleations for the UK

126

Q

How they try to influence or create specific place meanigs to shape the actiosn of and behaviours of indivudals, grousp, businesses and isnitutions

A

  • Reimagining- Re-imaging disassociates a place from bad pre-existing images in relation to poor housing, social deprivation, high levels of crime, environmental pollution and industrial dereliction- place and generate a new, positive set of ideas, feelings and attitudes of people to that place
  • This may include the revival of a pre-existing but outdated place image.
  • More commonly, it seeks to change a poor pre-existing image of a place.
  • oIt can then attract new investment (change behaviour of businesses) , retailing (businesses behaviour), tourists and residents- change in individual behaviour
  • Rebranding- Rebranding is the way or ways in which a place is redeveloped and marketed so that it gains a new identity. It can then attract new investment, retailing, tourists and residents. It may involve both re-imaging and regeneration
    oMany argue that rebranding must start from the inside and involve local residents with insider experiences – e.g. Relp and Tuan
  • Regeneration - Regeneration is a long term process involving redevelopment and the use of social, economic and environmental action to reverse urban decline and create sustainable communities
  • The people behind the catchy slogan, hashtag, or map of a heritage landscape have a particular task- to change our perception

127

Q

How successful ?

A

oProblems
Different stakeholders- pre-existing residents, local businesses, potential investors, local government and potential homeowners or visitors and it is a challenge to satisfy as many of these groups as possible
Resident-s want to portect and project their lcoa distinctiveness
Development agencies want to estbalsih a place bran base don government incentievs, avaibel tech and an areas international links
oSome schemes have actually driven out locals they ogrinally intended to help – gentrification

128

Q

General examples - rebranding

A

  • Example- 2013- People Make Glasgow new brand name – from a crowdsourcing media campaign
  • Example- Amsterdam
    oReputation as a major internal cultural centre threatened by a number of factors
    Greater competition from other cities both within and outside of the Netherlands
    Socioeconomic decline in some areas
    Liberl towards soft drugs and positions – inapprotoate for tatarctign new investors
    A fiale dbi to host the Olympocs
    oStregeties
    I Am Amerstdam slogan- 3D letters in front of the city’s famous Rijksmusuem in 2005 and now has been phtogrpahedover 800 times a day
    Social media – spread image across the world
    Amertsdam becam eoen of the msot successful destination brands on social media
    Re-imaging too successful- ‘over tousim’
    Before COVID, tourist numbers predicted to rise to over 20 million per year

129

Q

Slough

A

oExample- Slough
Butt of jokes for years
Betjeman- ‘come friendly bombs and fall on Slough/It isn’t fit for humans now’
Jimmy Carr- ‘if you want to kwn what Slough was like int h 1970s go there now’
Ricky Gervais – needed a ‘middle earnign , middle aged and middle management’ set
Trevor Lambert- rebranding team- Betjeman has a lot to answer fo- he never actually came to Slouhh
‘Proud ot tbe Slugh’ logo
UK’s third msot producitv etown outside London
Has europe’s largest privalty owned insutrial

130

Q

  • Tourist agency material

A

  • Tourist agency material
    oE.g. Vsisit Britian , National Parks, Rialway companies,
    oBrochures, vdieos, websites, magazine ads, slogans, logos to adopt a unique selling point
    oSongs, stories, photos, film , art

131

Q

Studentification – established by Smith in 2002

A

Influence social and economic charteritsi , present meanings
-However, in many ways, studentification remains distinct from gentrification, as the former typically contributes to a long-term decline in the physical environment and tenurial transformation toward renting (Smith, 2005).
Social
-Less owner occupied family housing, more shared private-rented housing and in shrot term rented tenancies – Houses of Multiple Occupancy
-Bars and fast food outlets replace primary schools
-Street blight- porptiesl ie unkempt and desertes outside of term time
-Perception of studnt snes eof place
-High levels of burglary and crime
Economic
-Escalation of proptey prices
-Proliferation of to let boards
-Closure of public and private services between July and Septmenerb

132

Q

Urbanisation

A

  • Increase in the proportion of people living in urban areas compared ot rural areas
  • Happens as a country industrialises – employment in new factories , terraced housing for workers
  • 90% of the UK live in towns and cities
  • Social impacts
    oGreater poverty, local governments undbale to provide service for everyone
    oConcentrated energy use leads to greater pollution – impact on human health
    oLarge volumes of uncollected waste creates hazards
    oCan a=magnigy the risk of enviro hazards- flooding flashy
  • Economic impacts

133

Q

Suburbanisation

A

  • Outward growth of urban development on outlying areas of the city – so close enough for city to be accessible
  • Social
  • Economic
    oIncrease rsouec consumption – use more land, use more reousces to commute

134

Q

Counter urbanisation

A

Counter urbanisation
-More an dmore people choosing to live on the edge of urban areas with many going to the countryside
-Why?
oAble to commute
oOnline shopping
oSafe
oMore value fo money in housing
oLess congestion
oWork form home
-Social
oBetter housing
oFinally, socially it has both negative and positive effects because it could cause an increase in a community feel however with people buying the homes as holiday homes, some of the homes are empty for long periods during the year
-Economic
oEconomically it is strong for the local towns because they are receiving more people who will spend money at the local shops and also pay taxes
oThe industrial sector continue to delcien and there is a rise in the service sector
oSecond homes – uncoopried for majoirty of year- local businesses cannot compete

135

Q

Gentrification – revival of an urban area that has been subject to enviro and socioeocnomci decline

A

  • Social
    oUrban areas become renovated, refurbish and improved at little cost to authorities
    oIncreasing social division as existin communities feel powerfless ot influence changes
  • Economic
    oIncreased customers for inner city business and retailers , libraries,schools, etc..
    oHouse proces increase rapidly, pricing out less affueltn local people
    oHigh rents

136

Q

Burgess Ubrna Land use Model

A

  • In 1925, Burgess proposed a descriptive urban land use model that divided cities into concentric circles expanding from downtown to the suburbs. This representation was built from Burgess’s observations of several American cities, notably Chicago, for which he provided empirical evidence. The model assumes a relationship between the socio-economic status (mainly income) of households and the distance from the Central Business District (CBD). The further from the CBD, the better the quality of housing, but the longer the commuting time. Thus, accessing better housing is done at the expense of longer commuting times (and costs).

137

Q

Quantitative data, including the use of geospatial data, must be used to investigate and present place characteristics

A

Stats-
-census – age, gender structure ethnicity, economic deprivation level
oproduced by the Office of National Statistics and stats are at national, regional and local levels
oevery 10 years
-IMD
oCriticism
Ranks and deciles are relative – they show that oen area is more deprived than another but not by how much
owhen interpreting maps the eyes drawn to last swaths of colour. This may be misleading as a geographically large local authority district may have a smaller population than a smaller geographical district
othe neighbourhood level indices provided description of areas but not of individuals with within those areas
othe indices identify aspects of deprivation, not affluence
the rich are aren’t mapped
-Criticisms
oThe use of quantifiable data such as statistics is not as objective as it may first appear. This is because people selectively choose the data they wish to use for their particular purpose. Their use therefore becomes subjective. Another criticism of using statistics when studying place is that they tell us very little about the human experience of a place and what it is like to live there

138

Q

Geospatial

A

  • Dtat about pele is often geolocated – insight into the way we lvie and how geographic comunites differ
  • Concerns have been raised by some groups of people about the idea that our every move or browse online can be monitored and is tractable using big data

139

Q

Qualitative

A

  • Maps
    oMaps can include hidden bias and influence
    Early world maps such as the Mappaundi c13-0 depicte the world as a flat disk with the Holy Land at the centre
    During colonial epxnaion, maps exeafferaed area size and resources
    In fact, Google Maps, like any search engine filters place – directing people towards businesses that have engineered their appearance on the first page of a Google search.
    Mercator projection
  • Northern landmasses look much bigger
  • Map is Eurocentric
  • Biomapping or emotional cartography
    oE.g. 2015 in the series Coast- presenter Nichloas Crane was mapped by geographer Jon Anderson – his stress levels measure when in Lodnon and on the Coast and mapped
  • Oral
    oInterviews
    Generated detailed isghts about a persons sense of place
    Allow reposndents to raise issues the itnerviwer may not have anticipated
  • E.g. GM- issues of immirgtaion after WW2 came up
    Can be used ot collect primary data that gives a depth of undertsanign about peoples lives and thie rlived experiences, opinions and feelings
    Disadvantges
  • Bias may affect reposnes of interview by using leading questions
  • People may not be hoenst as they like to present themselves in a favourbale light
  • Time consuming
  • Lack of objecitity comapred with other approaches
    oQuestionnare
    Psuh reposndents into answers which may not fir their access to experiences
    Little oppruntiy for eexplantion
  • Media
    oTV,Film,Photos, art, books, newpsapers, internt
    oIncreasingly reaching a alrger global audeicne so very important ins apign wider perceptions
    oPhtos
    Disdvanatges
  • Easily htoshooped and filietred to make them appear different
  • Can be selective in what they show
    oMarketing images tend to focus on the natural beatury of landscape without disturbance from humans
  • Who took it?
    oTextual sources
    Novels evoe a sense of place
  • Thoams Hardy’s dosert
  • Bronte country in Wets Yorkshire and East Lanchsire
    News- can be negative- e.g. media portrayal of city Liverpool – unemployment,e conomid eprivation
    oPoetry
    William Wordsworth is linked to the Lake District
    Seamus Heaney has written extensively about his Irish roots
    William Blake famously described the poverty and despair of industrial London.

oMusic
Evokes a sense of place
Different types of music with different areas – e.g. reggae with Jamaiza
*In 2010, Newport rapper Alex Warren and singer Terema Wainwright gained online fame with a parody of Jay-Z and Alicia Keys’ “Empire State of Mind” called “Newport State of Mind.” Their video, shot in black and white like the original, showcases Welsh landmarks instead of New York’s. Wainwright sings with a thick Welsh accent, referencing local culture and landmarks. The parody quickly garnered nearly 200,000 views on YouTube within two days. Similar parodies for various UK locations have since appeared on the platform.
oTV
Places are pivotal in storytelling, often associated with specific types of narratives, like haunted houses in horror or futuristic cities in sci-fi. However, media also shapes our perceptions of places, with both positive and negative effects.
For instance, the 2015 TV adaptation of Poldark boosted tourism in Cornwall
*The 2015 television dramatisation of the Poldark novels had a positive impact on the Cornish tourist trade as viewers, inspired by the shots of the dramatic coastline and beautiful beaches, flocked to the county to soak up the atmosphere.
*Hits on Visit Cornwall’s website soared by 65 per cent after the first episode alone and the property website Rightmove reported that househunting enquiries more than doubled.
*It is anticipated that the ‘Poldark effect’ will be felt well into the 2020s.
Similarly, Game of Thrones transformed Northern Ireland’s image, attracting thousands of tourists annually and significantly boosting the economy
*Brought over £250 million into the economy since 2010
*Replaced image of the troubles .
These two examples have shown how TV and film can represent place in a positive way. The reverse can also be true. Many crime dramas are located in urban areas, but not all crime occurs in cities. Equally, the sites chosen for filming can portray the same place in very different lights. Compare, for example, the representation of London in EastEnders (BBC, 1985–present) with the more glamourous skylines and buildings of The Apprentice (BBC, 2005–present) or the settings for the crime dramas Sherlock (BBC, 2011–2017) and Killing Eve (BBC, 2018–present).
oArt
Long been used to repsent place
*Gainsborough and Constable (Figure 8.28) are known for their landscapes of Suffolk, now sometimes referred to as ‘Constable Country’
*French artist Paul Cezanne painted Provence in southern France
*Japanese artist Hiroshi Yoshida is famous for his iconic wood block prints of Japanese landscapes.
The common criticism of such paintings was that they were pastoral fantasies giving the impression of a rural idyll, which did not exist for the majority of people living in the countryside at that time.
Paintings may be considered less reliable than photographs because there is more scope for individual interpretation and selection.
However, they can also show a deeper understanding of place because they allow the painter to show more of the character of what is there- lived experience
These paintings reflected a romantic vision which still shapes many people’s mental images of the countryside and is perpetuated through tourist brochures, chocolate boxes and jigsaw puzzles. Such constructs of rural places are powerful because they shape views on what the countryside is actually like and what it should be like.
oScultptues
E.g. Kelpies scultputre near Falkirk in Scotland
Graffit
-It has traditionally been associated with youth cultures claiming ownership of a place but the famous UK graffiti artist Banksy argues that the importance of graffiti is also to give a voice to people who aren’t normally heard in the mainstream
-Many consider graffiti as a type of vandalism and authorities are keen to remove it from public areas. Increasingly however, graffiti is being accepted into mainstream culture and art galleries may now stock graffiti images. In these places, graffiti is seen not as being ‘out of place’ but as something which can be bought and sold. It is also being used as a type of street art in the regeneration of places

140

Q

Location - GM

A

  • Large village in Bucks, in SE England
  • Connections: 49 mins NW of London by train and 6 miles N of major town High Wycombe

141

Q

Physical geography

A

  • In the Chiltern Hills- AONB- awarded in 1965
  • Chalk escarpment at the head of the Melbourne valley
  • Northern edge of the village is Mob well pond- source of the Melbourne- a chalk fed river
  • The upper part of this river flows intermittently after winter rains and dries up using the summer- a winterbourne.
  • Some of the rarest species living in chalk streams, such as brown trout and the water vole have adapted.
  • geology – chalk, with soil made from silt deposits leading to large vegetation growth, Chiltern valleys were formed by melting glaciers half a million year ago
  • The church of St Peter and St Paul made from local chalk rocks and Portland Limestone Dorset rock
    This all adds to place meaning because this is the landscape that residents are fighting so hard to protect from the disturbance of HS2, this is what unites them.

142

Q

  • Chiltern hills general

A

o2/3rds is ancient woodland – have the highest proportion of ancient woodland in the country
oin 2010, the Chiltern Conservation Board undertook assessment of the ecological value of local woodland- the report affirmed the importance of the area and argued that the impact of ‘fragmentation of habitats and colonies of flora and fauna’ that would come from HS2 should be evaluated as part of any environment impact assessment.
oThe hedgerows in the Chilterns function as corridors for wildlife, aiding the dispersal of species and are important habitats for bird nesting and feeding, there are around 4000 km of hedgerow in the AONB.

143

Q

Built environment

A

  • Flint churches
  • Roald Dahl Museum
  • Missenden Abbey
  • Highstreet
  • 60 buildings in GM are listed and date from the medieval period

144

Q

Place meaning and representation

Past

A

  • Great Missenden has had a variety of place meanings over the past millennium. Historically, in Saxon times, Great Missenden lay on the route between the Royal estates of King Harold in High Wycombe and Queen Elgiva of Chesham (individuals)
  • Later, in 1133, an Augustinian Monastery was established at Missenden Abbey, and remained until the dissolution of monasteries by Henry 8th in 1538. -gov policy?
    oKing Henry II was a frequent visitor of the abbey – on the way from London to Brill
    oAt the dissolution of the monastery, land was forfeited to the crown and left to Princess Elisabeth – drastically changed the role of the abbey and the town
  • In the 15th century, the high street was part of the route between London and the Midlands, the led to several inns being established on the Highstreet (the George Inn -1430-and Court House date from this period).
  • As the village grew to cater for more travellers, so further coaching inns appeared and, in Victorian times (1837) , there were 12 inns along the High Street and Church Street.
  • The community was reliant of the exogenous factor of travellers to invest in the town

145

Q

Present- GM

A

  • Now , GM place meaning revolves mostly around well known Roald Dahl – who lived there for 36 years
    oNumerous shops and services on the high street geared to the author- ‘the Roald dahl museum a, Café Twit and Matilda’s
    oAlso a Roald dahl trail – discover how the village and surrounding countryside inspired many of his books
  • Abbey – remains important to the town and hosts many events throughout the year
    oHas been owned by Buck New Uni since the 1990s and has remained a training facility ever since

Evaluation
– this change of place meaning is reflected in the conversion of a coaching inn into the Roald DAHL Museum – Displaying how the high street has altered
-This change from a abbey to a university facility marks a change in the place meaning of Great Missenden, from one of royal importance to a much smaller role as a training CENTRE

146

Q

Representation - GM

A

  • ITV Midsummer murders
  • 1980- horror film by Hammer Film producers
  • Denholm Elliot played an estate agent trapped in a recurring nightmare in barbers
  • ‘Matilda’ day – fore ne Matilda film

147

Q

Demographic change
Past
-GM

A

  • Pop size and structure
    oPop increased from 1576 in 1811 to 10138 in 2011 (543% increase )and 9960 in 2021
    oMigration of polish people WW2
  • Employment
    ogreat M has had a significant service sector, focused in and around the High Street, including its original 12 pubs
    oUntil 1920s and 1930s – it was a market town and agricultural hub
    oEmployment type changed from agricultural in 1811 to professional in 2011
    o2 Prime Ministers among its residents – Clement Attlee and Harold Wilson
    oLight industries played an important role after WW2
    oit also had a thriving manufacturing sector including Gerhard’s -an electroplating and stove enamelling factory, owned by family who had fled Russia in the early 20th century
    the Gerhadis move their business from the South Coast of England to great mrd in 1940 and supplied the aircraft industry during the war.
    There is now housing where the factory once stood behind the High Street
    oWright’s yard a major business in the local construction industry, employed almost 250 people before the Second World War and continued up into the 1980s
    oToday, the only business with the name Wright on the High Street is a funeral directors.
    oThis local manufacturing sector has been lost to the economy which has in turn affected the job prospects for some young people in GM
    o
  • Infrastructure
  • Met line arrived in 1894- connection to London- became a commuter village, since been replaced with Chiltern line (led to more professionals)

148

Q

Present

A

  • 2021 pop- 9960
  • OLD
    oElderly outnumber young dependants by 2.5%
    oWorking age is 10.2% lower than average (52.3%)
    oReflected by number of pension services and funeral services – bult enviro
    oReflected by geospatial tat-> 42.9% e-veterans (internet used as a utility rather than entertainment
    oa new project ‘the CLsiters tha is creating homes fin GM ‘exlsuively for over 60s’
  • WHITE
    o96% white – 16.8% higher than pop
    oOnly 47 people are ethnic
    o85.6% born in England
  • XIAN
    o69.9% Xian- 10.6% higher than national average
    oReflected din the environment- 4 churches within walking distance and 27 within driving distances
    oEaster and Xmas dates in Missenden Abbey
  • DETACHED HOUSING
    o40.52% DETACHED
  • Owned/mortgage houses
    o76.6% PROPERTIES OWNED BY RESIDENTS- 13% HIGHER THN NATIONAL AVERAGE
  • Average house price- £751 000)- $450 000 more than UK avg
  • Income
    o> £43 000 – above bucks and UK average
  • Educated
    o46.4% aged 17 to 74 had higher level qualifications (5.4% higher than UK average)
  • Not deprived
    oGM Ward is one of the 10% least deprived neighbourhoods in the country
  • PROFESSIONALS
    oProfessional occupations – 23%
    oManagerial positions – 24%
    oAll higher than UK average
    Future?
  • Interview data shows a significance % of young people on reaching employment age can no longer afford to stay

149

Q

Overall Chiltern demographics

A

  • 80 000 pop and 10 million within a us drive 2770 jobs are supported by visitors
  • 55 million leisure visits a year

150

Q

Cultural Change

A

Past
-High street gone from a busy travel oriented street -> quieter area with small independent artisan shops
Present
-Easter Bank holiday – GM Food Festival – attracts visitors – boots economy
-Last Sunday of every month – Roald Museums ‘scoff n’stroll’ a historic walk with tales of his books and surrounding are that inspire his stories
-45/50 shops independently owned
-Restaurants and coffee shops , beauticians most common – showing a high disposable income- non essential activities
-Minyulite cultural restarts surprisingly
oGreat Missenden New Akash Curry house chef voted best in bucks in 2022 in Eurasia awards
-Chiltern hills- walkers, cyclists, day trippers etc…
-Rolad Dahl -> Metidas , Café twist, musuem etc. (2016- 93 000 vistos post BFG film)
o‘Matilda day’ for new Matilda film
-Abbey

151

Q

Lived experience

A

Strong sense of localism from insiders
-Protesting HS2 and conservation of 400 year old ancient woodland
-E.g. Dirty Mavis ‘oak tree lament (Stop HS2)’ – 2011
o‘this morning strangers came with axe and saw
-Protesting against hom*ogenisation and blandness of corporation shops
-Residents fight to save 200 yr old oak tree (Ilona- supports 25000 species ) at risk of being felled by HS2
oSupported by MP Saharah green
oThere were successful
o‘HS2 now revving their plans’
-‘save leather lane oaks’
oBeen able to retain >40% of trees on leather lane
-HS2 dominates the representation of GM
oConcerns over value of houses and impact on local businesses
oPeter Delow in 2011 stated that Philip Hammond - S of S for transport- thought that the Chilterns was ‘an inferior AON and could be trashed with impunity’
Young people forced to leave due to lack of money and high price houses – so elderly left as a dying breed
oRegeneration needed to appeal to a younger population
E.g. housing near the station – travel to London or work
Outsider perspectives
-Philip Hammond – S of S for transport
-‘but some oppose the line purely on aesthetic grounds…. Scar on landscape… despoiling AONB’
-‘have you looked ta the route?’
-‘between Great Missenden and HS2 are the A413 and the Chiltern railway and a lien of pylons so this is no some constable country

152

Q

Agents of change

A

Individual
-Opposition from Dirty Massive and Peter Delo - though that Philip Hammond thought the Chilterns were an inferior AONB
Local community
-Community opposition to HS2
-Managed to save more than 40% of oak trees on leather lane
-Chiltern conservatism board and Chiltern district council declared opposition on grounds of enviro impact and how it would dissect the AONB
-Opposition to Tesco coming to the arwa- successful (but then coop came)
-Oppsotion to coasta- unsuccessful
Local gov/council
National
-First high speed rail In UK was HS1 – the channel tunnel
-2009- first proposal for HS2
oWhy?
oWould address capacity issues on Westcoast, reduce travel time to Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds, Edinburgh
oBridge north/south economic divide – allow business people to reach key cities sin the north
-2010- announced HS2 would go through GM and Chilterns (less than a mile from the village)
-Boris Johnson said those who oppose HS2 are pretending to have environment objections when they are just NIMBY’s
-Work began in 2018
Global
-Concept of high speed rail has been expanding in Europe since 1980s
-In 2007, the first HS rails launched din China
Impact of HS2
-Traffic disruption
-Excavation
-Tree clearance
-Businesses and homeowners affected by falling property prices (Oct 2022 – fall of 33% over the last 12 months) , decline in business- e.g. Annie Bailey’s restaurant closed in 2013
Future? – falling prices may attract younger again and boost economy
‘how far do you gre with the view that local and regional powers and processes determine the rate of change in a place more thn national and international infleunce’?
-Local and regional power and processes are not as detrimental in determining rat eof change in a place, for example GM failures to stop HS3
-Instead, international and national influence hold this pwer as shown in the declien ad deprivation in Balckpool and the UK’s governemtns pwoower in caryoutng out HS2
-

153

Q

Economic change

A

Past
-Reliant on travellers staying in the inns from 15th century to the 19th century
Present
-NOW: ‘a self-supporting, more or less closed world’ – ONE Hundred Years of Great Missenden- Valerie Eaton Griffith.

154

Q

Quantitative

A

Quantitative
-stastical and cartographic sources far more useful
-e.g. land use surveys sho w geogrpahers hwo land use of GM has flcuatuated over years, indicating a change it character
-the highstreet used to lie on the route between Lodnon ad Milands in the 15th century
-this exogenous factor led to a change in ladn use with the higshtreet becoming home to 12 coachign inns in victroian times
-ladn use - introudciton o the railway in 1892- this land used combined with statsical data showed a trend of GM becming a commuter sttelemt as people travlle dinto Lodnon for work – change in character as money tat would be incvetse dinto the town – e.g. during lunch breaks- was now beign investe dint the city- perhaps damaging the economy and traffic congestion could have increased
-stast- chage of charcter due to changing emplpyemnt types
-stast- demograohcus give insight into the ageing structure – several pensioner services and a new project ‘the CLsiters tha is creating homes fin GM ‘exlsuively for over 60s’
-stats- hous e prices- avg £751000- 450 000 more than natonal avg
-10% least deprived
-This suggests GM is exlusleivy home to rich families
-And is posha dn affuelnt
-Alo shown by 45/50 of the highstreet ebign a indpednt – strong sense of localism
-The most common shops were restuarents and coffee shops and barbers/beauticans showing that lcoals have a high levek of disposable income which theys pend on nonessential actviies – boosts economy
-- downsides of census data etc…

155

Q

Qualitative

A

Qualitative
-Artistic sources can give a good idea of charcter of GM ucrrnelty, but perhaps articis sources give a more vague picture of the changing character rof GM
-Twitterposts/pthogrpahy give a goo idea oftthe character rof GM
-Most posts with #great miseenden convey local oppsiton to HS2 which is just a mile from the village , alongside multiple pucture of protestrs cmapgingin against its contrsuion
oFor exmapel, many protested - e.g. swampy- in order to save many fot he 100 year old trees in GM
oThis charcte rof strong localism is also illustrate dby Dirty Mavis song called ‘oak tree lament’ with lyrice ‘this morning stranger scame with axe and saw’
-RICHMONDsausge advert filemd in GM and displayed as a ‘cholcate box’ British village
-This charcte rof beign a quientessial british village with rolling countryside was added to the Roald Dahl book made film ‘fantastic Mr Fox’
-These effectvley shown outsiders the experience of GM’s sense of place
-Both thtese artistic sources dipaly the carcte rof GM by highlights attitdes of locals0 however fial to effecvitley present how the attided and hcarter of GM has change dover time
-Better shown by statsical and cartographic sources – e.g. conversion of a coaching inn into the Roald Dahl museum – reflects change in place meaning from a place that epopel travel through to place people travel to – further relfcted Café Twit and Matlida’s coffeshops
-However, a mixture of sources is still needed to give a geographer the best estimate of a places charcter and locale
-Downsides of music.. in ore detail

156

Q

Endogenous- BP

A

Endogenous
Location
-Located in the North West of England and on the Fylde Coast Peninsula, Blackpool covers an area of around 35km², with 11.2km (7miles) of seafront.
-27 miles of Liverpool and 40 miles NW of Manchester
Topography
Physical geography
-Climate - mixed weather , rainy (cannot compete with resorts elsewhere)
-Coastal
Land use
Built enviro
-Oversupply of HMOs which are unsuitable for families
->50% housing in inner areas is rented
infrastructure
-For a coastal town, Blackpool has good strategic transport links.
-1846- railway built - provided trade and long distance cheap travel for working classes

157

Q

Demographic change - BP

A

Past
-Pop structure
oPop in 1800- 473
oExponential from 1861- from 3000 to 153000 to 1961 (peak)
-Deprivation as a result of budget airlines taking investment (TNCs)
-Employment type
oUnassuming fishing village
oTourism sector/ service sector
Present
-Key stats
-Pop size and structure
oPop- 141036 2021
opop decreased and counter urbanisation to surbs Fylde and Prestwood
oMajority 50-64 yrs (ageing population )old – 21.9%
o94.7% white
o50.8% Xian
o88% born in the UK
o3% ethnic minorities
-Employment
o6.2 % unemployed (compared to 3.8% UK)
o31.4% worked in distribution, hotels and restaurants sector in 2006
oMost hold 2 or 3 part time jobs for low pay, with shirt term contracts
oGSCE attainment below average
-Deprivation
oHas the 6th highest proportion of LSOAs ranked 105 most deprived in the UK 39/94 LSOAs
o46% of pupils live in 10% most deprived neighbourhoods
oBlackpool has one of the highest rates of young people claiming Universal Credit in the country
-Crime- most dangerous town in Lancashire – 86% higher crime rate then age Lancashire and 91% than UK avg
-Health
o-UNHEALTHIEST ARE IN ENGLAND
o5 year LE gap with the rets of England
oIn yr 6 24% classified as obese
o27 yr gap in LE between man in Kensington compared to BP

Future?
-Deprivation being reduced do to government levelling up policy

158

Q

social inequalties- BP

A

Inequalities within BP
-LE is 12.3 years lower for men and 10.1 yrs lower for women in the most deprived areas than the least
-Bloomfield
ohigh pop density -overcrowded
ohighest % of no qualification in BP-39%
oWard with the highest % of adults claiming unemployment benefits
o-In Bloomfield alone there is an off-licence for every 250 people, each trying to undercut the other. In the town centre, all-night drinking is legendary, with some clubs not closing their doors until 7am
oBloomfield is the unhealthiest district in England’s unhealthiest town, Blackpool. More than half of the local population smokes, the highest rate in the country. One in three pregnant women, even up to the point they go into hospital to give birth, are still smoking. Alcoholism is rife, while deaths from drug abuse rival those of the worst estates in London or Glasgow.

159

Q

Cultural Change

A

Past
-Wealthy workers go on holiday to BP, spend income etc.., largely beach culture, but also music, and key places
-Became a place for stag and hen does
Now
-Culture coming back? B side of the seaside
Evidence of external agencies
-Individuals
oNorth pier- where sooty began by Harvy Corbet
o‘Oh blackpoll song’ by the Beautiful South
oFirst music festival held there in 1901- hosted Beatles and Rolling stones Music
oWinter gardens 1878- rolling stones, oasis, frank Sinatra have performed
oBlackpool Pleasure beech 1896 – home to the grand national roller coaster- constructed by American engineer Charles Paide in 1935- now one of 2 surviving wooden Mobius Loop roller coaster in the world
-Local council
oBlackpool illuminations 1879
oComedy carpet – one of the largest public art ever commissioned - The £2.6m Comedy Carpet was commissioned by Blackpool Council as part of the multi-million-pound regeneration of the seafront including vital sea-defence works.- Referring to the work of more than 1,000 comedians and comedy writers, the carpet gives visual form to jokes, songs and catchphrases dating from the early days of variety to the present
-National
oBlackpool Tower- 1894- were Strictly is
oBhaji on the Beach 1993- BP seen as a form of escapism from racial and sexist discrimination
Made by British film company
-TNCs
o2010- (present connections)
oMerlin Entertainment take son operations for Blackpool attractions including the Tower in partnership with the council
o2010- Blackpool tower eye opens
o2011- Blackpool Dungeon open
o2023- Gruffalo and Friends clubhouse opens (also has a Peter Rabbit attraction)
oMadame Tussauds
oBlackpool
oTower eye
oBlackpool Towe circus
oBlackpool tower ballroom
-Globa institution
oBlackpool piers are all in the World’s monuments watch list

160

Q

economic

A

Past
-Was one of the UK’s mass tourist destinations
-3x as many visitors as its rivals
-Visitors peaked at 17 million
-Between 1979 and 88- lost 39 million visitor nights
Present
-Visitor numbers fell from 17 million to 11 million in 2000
-overly reliant on tourism and had no alternative industry
-now known for stag does and hen does – downmarket drift to young people who spend less / de-multiplier effect
-Blackpool is the largest seaside resort anywhere in Europe, attracting round 17 million visitors annually who spend a huge £545 million a year. This tourism provides over 29,000 people with employment
Evidence of external forces
-National gov
oWorkers given annual holidays in the 1870s
oRegeneration – government announced in 2022 a levelling up investment of £300 million for Blackpool Central- just off famous Golden Mile
Will create 1000 jobs and attract 600 000 more visitors each year – massive boost to local economy . boost annual spend in the town by around 75m
Blackpool Central will be the largest single investment in Blackpool for over a century – transform into a year round leisure destination, home to new entertainment centres hotels and a new public square and Heritage Quarter
oPrevious intervention by the government includes cracking down on rogue landlords, finding new opportunities for regeneration and delivering new homes and jobs for the community

  • TNCs
    oMerlin entertainment leads partnership to create job opportunities for young people in Blackpool- provides placements over summer and autumn tourism season - 6 months placements . Receive industry linked NVQ training and a one to one kickstart coach to support them find their next job
    Linked with the council and Blackpool and The Fylde college
    oBudget airlines /package holidays reduced visitors and impacted the tourism sector – which Blackpool was reliant on q
    oForeign travel grew in 1960s and 70s – more reliable sunny

161

Q

Meaning and representation

A

Now
-Insider perspective
o‘nothing ever gets fixed’,’ little opportunities for children’
-Outsider
o‘best avoided’, ‘overpriced’’ past its sell by date’
oSeen as place to go on holiday if you couldn’t afford better
o‘I think it is improving slowly’
oThere are 800 homeless in Blackpool this group may feel like outsiders due to their extreme poverty that limits them from taking in the fundamental cultural activities in Blackpool such as going to the pleasure beach – entry can be £40 +) and theme parks
oAlso only 3% ethnic monitories , compared to 88% who were born in the UK
Evidence of external forces
-Local
oBeside campaign – see the B side of the seaside – aim to change visitor perceptions and expectations of Blackpool and urging them to explore other areas not just the beach – explore arts, architecture, music, exhibitions
-4 years after unveiling £100 million improvements, a new plan called Destination Blackpool aims to tackle the ‘deep-rooted negative perceptions of the town’
-The resort wants to become a quality year-round place for families- like the Lakes- once it shrugs off its bawdy stag and hen party reputation
-National
oBBC- Strictly represented Blackpool Tower ballroom –
-Gov
oRegeneration
o-heritage quarter- reimaging but going back to positive past place meanings
o-The Grade II Listed former King Edward VII Picture House will be transformed into a new ‘Artisan Food Hall’, which spills out onto new outdoor space for ‘al fresco’ dining.
o-The locally listed King Edward VII pub will be refurbished into a new pub and hotel, creating a modern, family friendly environment offering quality food and beverages.
o-The King Edward VII apartment building will be renovated into a high-quality ‘Aparthotel’ keeping its original character.

162

Q

Quantitative

A

Census
-Blackpool’s population has decreased since 1961 – 1530 00 to 141,100 in 2021- decrease in the popularity of the town and suggest increasing social problems have pushed people out
-Also shows deprivation
-2011- 9.2% of the population was unemployment and now in 2021- 6.2% unemployment (national UK average- 3.8%)- decrease in unemployment , perhaps showing how the £300 million rejuvenation is combating economic problems in Blackpool/ providing jobs
-(though census data can be fed lies and manipulation by the public , some may also not have filled it out and this can make a narrow set of results)
IMAD
-39/94 LSOAs are in 10% most deprived

163

Q

Qualitative

A

Media
o-Positive
oBhaji on the Beach 1994- BP seen as a form of escapism from racial and sexist discrimination
oStrictly
oCoronation street
oNegatively
o
-Music
o ‘h blackpoll song’
-Art
oComedy carpet – one of the largest public art ever commissioned

164

Q

shifts

A

Shift of people
-When it was going through the Butler’s tourist model, tourist numbers rose, stagnate and then decline
-When people started to leave/ go on holiday abroad, money left too , less revenue in tourism sector
-However 2010- Merlin Entertainment began investing in attractions
-Government invested in regeneration schemes
Shift of ideas
-Going abroad/ budget holiday, idea of self catering etc.. appealing – sunny European holidays
Essays
To what extent has the character of the place been affected by external agencies
-Budget airlines and companies that offer package holidays
oIntroduced cheap air travel in the 1960s and changed Blackpool’s character
oTourists now attracted to better climates
oLed to BP to stagnate and decline – 2000- 17 million to 11 million
Became a place of hen and stag does – attracting younger people who spent less – cases accommodation to be abandoned
-However, this external agency did not remove Blackpool deep seaside culture and the end factor that it is a coastal town . It is still one of the most visited seaside resorts in the UK

165

Q

Resource

A

Something that can be used to satisfy human need

166

Q

Optimum population

A

Means an ideal balance between population and resources. It refers to the population size in an area, which, working with all resources, will give the highest standard of living for people in that area.

167

Q

Overpopulation

A

means number of people exceeds supporting capacity of resources i.e. too many people putting pressure on resources
If growth continues, standard of living will go down.
E.g. Mali

168

Q

Underpopulation

A

Underpopulation means resources could support a greater population without lowering standards of living i.e. too few people to use resources efficiently.
E.g?
Canada, Australia, Norway

169

Q

Define Optimum Population

A

population where resources can be balanced/ can sustain human life

170

Q

Draw Optimum Population

A

[ x
[ x x
[ x x
[ x x
[
[
[
——————————————– POP
resources y axis

171

Q

when was earthshoot day 2023

A

27th July/

172

Q

potential impact of climate change on agriuclure

A

desertification, potential unstable farming models, more irrigation needed- affects soil PH - salt pans

173

Q

changing places quote

A

there’s no place like home - DOROTHY from Wizards of Oz

Yi Tuan Fu - ‘human love of a place’- topophilia

Doreen Massey - ‘global sense of place’
‘if history is about time, geography is about space’

‘geography of nowhere’ - James Kunstler

John Agnew- location, locale, sense of place

174

Q

What is Clube of Rome population theory?

A

reach environmental limits in next 100 years and there will be a sudden population decline

175

Q

Name one impact of CC on health

A

tropical diseases will expand out of the tropics as the atmosphere gets warmer (e.g. malaria)

176

Q

Draw a population pyramid of a country in stage 4

A

UK
vertical rectangle

177

Q

what is the difference between near and out sourcing

A

near sourcing is outside the oc*ntry but neabry so not as suspecitble to global supply chian distruptions

outsourcing is further (different company)

178

Q

How many countries account for half of world trade

A

10

179

Q

world average life expectancy

A

73.3

180

Q

What region will see most population growth

A

Sub-saharan

181

Q

What is the population of Amersham?

A

17300

182

Q

Name one way a TNC is spatially organised

A

Vertical integration
Horizontal integration

183

Q

What is the role of the IMF?

A

to give out loans to developing countries to provide economic stability

184

Q

Qualitative resource in GM

A

dirty mavis song Oak Tree Lament 2011 (Stop HS2)

185

Q

WHat percentage of all water is held by oceans?

A

97.50%

changing places Flashcards by Hester Bowes-Smith (2024)

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