eprintid: 4081 rev_number: 6 eprint_status: archive userid: 1 dir: disk0/00/00/40/81 datestamp: 2022-10-11 11:51:09 lastmod: 2022-10-13 07:39:44 status_changed: 2022-10-11 11:51:09 type: thesis metadata_visibility: show sword_depositor: 1 creators_name: Witschaß, Eleonore creators_id: S4954092 creators_email: e-witschass@t-online.de title: Everybody welcome? How popularity limits the access to public parks ispublished: unpub full_text_status: public abstract: Urban Environmental Injustice appears in public parks as a reflection of societal issues, limiting the accessibility of green spaces for different social groups. Factors of park design, functionality, and discourse impact the image and use of the park. Using a Feminist Political Ecology lens, this paper unwraps the underlying structures in the contrasting cases of the Clamart-Park and the Kurpark in Lüneburg (GER) from a past and current perspective. The experience of socio-natural relationality in the material context of the two parks is thereby at the core of the research. Social groups vulnerable to crime and queer people feel more comfortable in the strictly regulated and purposefully designed Kurpark. Social groups vulnerable to stigmatisation and socio-spatial exclusion use the Clamart-Park as a meeting point in the city centre. Conflicts occurring in the latter resemble deeper societal issues. The Clamart-Park’s narrative as a space of fear and the Kurpark’s regulations reinforce distributive injustice, reflecting exclusionary patterns for the affected groups. The low recognitional justice for marginalised groups intensifies this conflict. Procedural justice is partly achieved through round tables but faces limits of making everybody feel heard. Commoning practice, acknowledging both the needs of vulnerable users and their proposals to ease the tension in the parks, can help to overcome this issue. Finally, there is a need for more public spaces responding to the diverse needs of the citizens, as well as an increased flexibility in the social system’s structures to enable all groups to participate in creative commoning projects. date: 2022 pages: 61 thesis_type: master degree_programme: EIP tutors_name: Turhan, E. tutors_name: Lamker, C.W. tutors_organization: Fac. Ruimtelijke wetenschappen, Basiseenheid Planologie tutors_organization: Fac. Ruimtelijke wetenschappen, Basiseenheid Planologie tutors_email: e.turhan@rug.nl tutors_email: C.W.Lamker@rug.nl security: public keywords_local: Urban Environmental Justice keywords_local: Feminist Political Ecology keywords_local: Case Study keywords_local: Public Parks keywords_local: Commoning language_iso: en date_issued: 2022-10-11 citation: Witschaß, Eleonore (2022) Everybody welcome? How popularity limits the access to public parks. Master thesis. document_url: https://frw.studenttheses.ub.rug.nl/4081/1/Witschass_master%20thesis_UEJ_S4954092_09-07-2022_online.pdf