Negotiating Green Space for Capital Accumulation: The Case of North Port Quay

With ecological threats being used to legitimize the introduction of radical forms of property development, it is important to understand their discursive operation. An analysis of media texts, meetings and places around the North Port Quay “sustainable development” project – proposed by a consortiu...

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Main Author: Kerr, Thor
Format: Journal Article
Published: Common Ground Publishing 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijf.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.203/prod.180
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16117
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author Kerr, Thor
author_facet Kerr, Thor
author_sort Kerr, Thor
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description With ecological threats being used to legitimize the introduction of radical forms of property development, it is important to understand their discursive operation. An analysis of media texts, meetings and places around the North Port Quay “sustainable development” project – proposed by a consortium of property developers for a 345-hectare seabed site off the coast of Fremantle in Western Australia – found that global ecological threats were read by local citizens in heterogeneous ways influenced by their sensual experience of space. Attempts to legitimize North Port Quay through representation of scientifically-demonstrable future phenomena threatening the world were not rejected by engaged citizens but, rather, reinscribed as development threats to sensually experienced objects such as “our beaches”. These citizens responded conservatively and antagonistically when they felt that “our beaches” and other objects of affective investment were being threatened. Their desire to restore experience of such objects served to unify a popular movement that prevented North Port Quay through localized practices of institutional democracy. This study suggests that attempts to shift local planning decisions to regional decision-making bodies in the name of solving global ecological threats should be resisted because of the open meaning of these threats and their relation to sensually experienced objects of local environments; which, when threatened, produce powerful antagonisms.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-161172017-02-28T01:25:47Z Negotiating Green Space for Capital Accumulation: The Case of North Port Quay Kerr, Thor urban planning green built environment ecological threats sustainable development media studies environmental discourse cultural studies With ecological threats being used to legitimize the introduction of radical forms of property development, it is important to understand their discursive operation. An analysis of media texts, meetings and places around the North Port Quay “sustainable development” project – proposed by a consortium of property developers for a 345-hectare seabed site off the coast of Fremantle in Western Australia – found that global ecological threats were read by local citizens in heterogeneous ways influenced by their sensual experience of space. Attempts to legitimize North Port Quay through representation of scientifically-demonstrable future phenomena threatening the world were not rejected by engaged citizens but, rather, reinscribed as development threats to sensually experienced objects such as “our beaches”. These citizens responded conservatively and antagonistically when they felt that “our beaches” and other objects of affective investment were being threatened. Their desire to restore experience of such objects served to unify a popular movement that prevented North Port Quay through localized practices of institutional democracy. This study suggests that attempts to shift local planning decisions to regional decision-making bodies in the name of solving global ecological threats should be resisted because of the open meaning of these threats and their relation to sensually experienced objects of local environments; which, when threatened, produce powerful antagonisms. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16117 http://ijf.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.203/prod.180 Common Ground Publishing restricted
spellingShingle urban planning
green built environment
ecological threats
sustainable development
media studies
environmental discourse
cultural studies
Kerr, Thor
Negotiating Green Space for Capital Accumulation: The Case of North Port Quay
title Negotiating Green Space for Capital Accumulation: The Case of North Port Quay
title_full Negotiating Green Space for Capital Accumulation: The Case of North Port Quay
title_fullStr Negotiating Green Space for Capital Accumulation: The Case of North Port Quay
title_full_unstemmed Negotiating Green Space for Capital Accumulation: The Case of North Port Quay
title_short Negotiating Green Space for Capital Accumulation: The Case of North Port Quay
title_sort negotiating green space for capital accumulation: the case of north port quay
topic urban planning
green built environment
ecological threats
sustainable development
media studies
environmental discourse
cultural studies
url http://ijf.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.203/prod.180
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16117