• Skip to main content
  • Accessibility information
Contact us
  • Accessibility
  • Staff
  • Students
The University of Northampton

The University of Northampton

Site tools

  • Advanced Search
  • Site Map
Search

Site Navigation

  • Home
  • About us
  • Study
  • Research
  • Social enterprise
  • Business & community
  • Alumni
  • Login
  • NECTAR Home
  • NECTAR FAQs
  • Browse Publications
  • Advanced Search
  • JISC Project
  • Contact
  • Help with NECTAR

Cars, dogs and mean people: environmental fears and dislikes of children in Berlin and Paris

Tools
- Tools
+ Tools

Nikitina-den Besten, O. (2008) Cars, dogs and mean people: environmental fears and dislikes of children in Berlin and Paris. Urban Trends in Berlin and Amsterdam. 110, pp. 116-125. 1430-4775.
Full text not available from this repository.
  • Information
Creators:Nikitina-den Besten, O.
Abstract:
The new social studies of childhood consider children active and creative users of their immediate environments. To make our cities more child-friendly, we need to understand how children perceive and explore their neighbourhoods, what they find attractive or unattractive about them. The research was carried out in socially and architecturally contrasted areas of two European capitals -Paris and Berlin, and involved, on the whole, 200 schoolchildren aged 10-13. To study children's attitudes towards spaces and places in these areas, I used a questionnaire and the method of subjective maps: children were asked to draw their way home from school, as well as "their territory", and to mark their maps with specially designed "emoticons".
Rather than studying differences in environmental attitudes between the groups of children, the paper draws on the qualitative analysis of those fears and dislikes that were found in common across the groups. Thus, the research resulted in a typology of children's dislikes and fears associated with their city areas. In particular, it was found out that places "occupied" by "mean or bizarre people", as well as by traffic, are strongly disliked or feared. Unpleasant images of the past (memories or "urban myths") or of the future (possible dangers) can also play the role of "the symbolical occupants" of a place and make children avoid it. The concept of a symbolically occupied territory is illustrated in a more detail on the example of a social housing estate on the outskirts of Paris. Examples of children's subjective maps are featured in the article.
The research suggests that the next step in making urban environments more child-friendly would be a consultation process with children - their participatory involvement in the planning and design of city spaces
Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:Children,urban segregation, educational segregation, drawings, subjective maps, child-centred research methods, visual methods
Subjects:H Social Sciences > HT Communities. Classes. Races > HT101 Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology > HT206 Children in cities
H Social Sciences > HQ The family. Marriage. Women > HQ767 Children. Child development
Schools and Departments:Research Centre > The Centre for Children and Youth
Date:2008
Funders or Sponsors:DAAD, Mairie de Paris
Related URLs:
  • Full text
Repository Staff Only: item control page
Top

Main switchboard

01604 735500

Course enquiries

0800 358 2232

study@northampton.ac.uk

  • Accessibility statement
  • Terms and conditions

Follow us

Follow us on twitter Follow us on youtube Follow us on flickr Follow us on facebook

Find us

Avenue Campus
Map of Avenue Campus
Park Campus
Map of Park Campus

Copyright © 2010 The University of Northampton