TY - JOUR
T1 - The Place of Greening
T2 - Comparing Civic Engagement Scenes of Urban Natures across Danish Cities
AU - Blok, Anders
AU - Juvik, Amanda K.
AU - Kvist Møller, Anna Helene
AU - Raaschou-Pedersen, Jonas Skjold
AU - Laage-Thomsen, Jakob
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - As elsewhere in Europe, cities in Denmark have witnessed a surge in civic urban nature engagement, such as place- and practice-based initiatives (e.g., public-access community gardens, organic food collectives, and grazing associations that enhance biodiversity). While this expansion of urban green communities, as we call them, is widely noted in the literature, less attention has been paid to the comparative variability of their local civic expression. In this article, we use digital methods to map out the group styles, the spatial intergroup networks, and the cultural-political value landscapes of 130 urban green communities across the four largest cities in Denmark. To compare results, we develop the concept of "civic engagement scenes" as a way of responding to recent developments in cultural and political sociology. Overall, we show how this notion allows for interpreting civic greening groups: they are neither neighborhood-based endeavors nor hubs of social movement mobilization, but rather geographies of co-engagement that span cities while also forge new senses and practices of place.
AB - As elsewhere in Europe, cities in Denmark have witnessed a surge in civic urban nature engagement, such as place- and practice-based initiatives (e.g., public-access community gardens, organic food collectives, and grazing associations that enhance biodiversity). While this expansion of urban green communities, as we call them, is widely noted in the literature, less attention has been paid to the comparative variability of their local civic expression. In this article, we use digital methods to map out the group styles, the spatial intergroup networks, and the cultural-political value landscapes of 130 urban green communities across the four largest cities in Denmark. To compare results, we develop the concept of "civic engagement scenes" as a way of responding to recent developments in cultural and political sociology. Overall, we show how this notion allows for interpreting civic greening groups: they are neither neighborhood-based endeavors nor hubs of social movement mobilization, but rather geographies of co-engagement that span cities while also forge new senses and practices of place.
KW - civic scenes
KW - co-engagement networks
KW - intercity comparison
KW - urban greening
KW - SPACE
KW - COMMUNITIES
KW - GARDENS
KW - civic scenes
KW - co-engagement networks
KW - intercity comparison
KW - urban greening
U2 - 10.1177/15356841211073589
DO - 10.1177/15356841211073589
M3 - Journal article
VL - 21
SP - 91
EP - 112
JO - City and Community
JF - City and Community
SN - 1535-6841
IS - 2
M1 - 15356841211073589
ER -