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        Chapter Educational Borderlands

        IN Book: Spatialized Injustice in the Contemporary City

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        Author(s)
        Elizabeth Barrett, Sarah
        Contributor(s)
        Nombuso Dlamini, S. (editor)
        Stienen, Angela (editor)
        Language
        English
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        Abstract
        This volume documents research illustrating public dissents and interventions to injustice in modern-day cities. Authors present everyday occurrences of city life and place making; still, they show how the ordinary city grows from historical dimensions of injustice, violence and fear. Yet, ordinary citizens continue to make the city their own, to contribute to the creation of city structures and to contest those practices of spatial demarcation, which limit rather than uplift their everyday social livelihood. Chapters show how marginalized populations, from racial, to gendered, to the working poor, are part of the apparatus that makes the city function. However, their contributions to city arrangement and endurance are perpetually at the margins, and city spaces continue to be designed in ways that ignore and negate the existence of those who protest inequity. Novel to the volume are chapters that document and illustrate contestations of city spaces through artistic representation. Public spaces like schools, art galleries and museums are presented as central to projects of inhabiting, remembering and reimagining (in) the just city. Still, ordinary city spaces, like the public washroom, illustrate issues of gender inequity, spatial bias and other art-based protests. City dwellers interested in learning about ‘the making’ of the city; and those interested in the city as a space of possibilities – and the good life, will benefit from this volume. Scholars of geography, space, art and social justice will marvel and simultaneously be appalled by the everyday minute, yet shocking descriptions of the complexity – and unfairly structured city spaces in which they dwell.
        URI
        https://oapen-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12657/108973
        Keywords
        School Physics; Undergraduate Physics; Cultural Border Crossing; High School Physics; Science Teacher Candidates; Successful Science Student; School Science; Student’s Home Culture; Physics Practice; Education Borderlands; Symbolic Violence; Critical Incidents; Wo; Postsecondary Education; High School Physics Teachers; Smooth; Exclusionary Tactics; Physics Student; High School; Rocky; Superheroes; Hold; Open Inquiry Characteristic; Inclusive School Culture
        DOI
        10.4324/9780429434570-13
        ISBN
        9780429434570, 9780429434570, 9781138352766, 9781032186528
        Publisher
        Taylor & Francis
        Publisher website
        https://taylorandfrancis.com/
        Publication date and place
        London, 2022
        Imprint
        Routledge
        Series
        Routledge Advances in Sociology,
        Classification
        Society and culture: general
        Sociology
        Pages
        189 - 210
        Rights
        https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
        • Imported or submitted locally

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        • If not noted otherwise all contents are available under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

        Credits

        • logo EU
        • This project received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 683680, 810640, 871069 and 964352.

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