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Participatory Mapping of Territoriality Across Florida’s Beaches

Autor John D. Morgan, Jocelyn Evans
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 2 sep 2022
This book offers a theoretical and practical exploration of the beach as space and places unique disciplinary lenses (Political Science and Geography). If we accept that what one possesses, one has a claim to, becoming property, then how that possession is enforced, socially, makes all the difference in defining what constitutes territoriality. Morgan and his colleagues have carried out various studies and applied various methods to study the developing coast of Florida. From these efforts, we compare the different regions of the State (e.g., Florida panhandle vs. South Florida) in terms of local beach culture and economics to unpack the topic of tension between beach property and access using firsthand accounts in many cases. This book approaches the complex topic of territoriality on Florida’s beaches from multiple perspectives but related methods involving time geography, a public space index, participatory mapping/cartography, and transboundary viewsheds. This analysis illustrates the fruitfulness of conceptualizations of property that are complex, multiplicative, and evolving. It calls for a recognition of human rights to the commons -- both now and in the future. And it highlights the constructed nature of public space - as a space that provides meaning through bodily performance and encounter.
 Approaches the complex topic of territoriality on Florida’s beaches from methods of participatory mapping/cartography and performance art.

Offers a theoretical and practical exploration of the beach as space and place.

Utilizes the lens of territoriality and field-based participant cartographic mapping to understand better how the developed shoreline is territorialized.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783030973148
ISBN-10: 303097314X
Pagini: 100
Ilustrații: XIV, 100 p. 39 illus., 31 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2022
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1.- Brief history of "the beach" in Florida. Chapter 2.- The legal geography of the beach. Chapter 3.- The value of the property on/near the beach, despite natural hazard risk. Chapter 4.- Capturing the beach experience. Chapter 5.- Assessing public space along Florida beaches: NW FL case study. Chapter 6.- Sketch mapping accessibility. Chapter 7.- Explicit territoriality: good/bad fences. Chapter 8.- Implied territoriality: good/bad neighbors. Chapter 9.- Mapping the potential of conflict: transboundary viewsheds. Chapter 10.- Conclusion: bringing it all together. 

Notă biografică

Dr. Derek Morgan is an Associate Professor of geographic information science at the University of West Florida. Morgan has published several scholarly articles on topics within to domain of urban and political geography ranging from studies of cartographic representation of mobility in crime mapping, participatory mapping, and legislative redistricting. Morgan, who has degrees in economics, management information systems, and geography, is an active member the Association of American Geography. Morgan’s work has been published in Transactions in GIS, Papers in Applied Geography, Journal of Urban Design, and other places. Morgan’s recent review of Andrew W. Kahrl’s book entitled Free the Beaches: The Story of Ned Coll and the Battle for America’s Most Exclusive Shoreline by was recently published in the Journal of Historical Geography.
Dr. Jocelyn Evans, Professor of government and Interim Director of the Kugelman Honors Program at the University of West Florida, teaches courses on American political institutions, democratic theory, the social meaning of civic space, architecture and democracy, and research methods. She has published several books and scholarly articles that explore congressional behavior, political culture, and political science education. Evans is the author, co-author, or editor of several books, including: Women, Partisanship, and the Congress (Palgrave 2005), One Nation Under Siege: Congress, Terrorism, and the Fate of American Democracy (University Press of Kentucky 2011), Congressional Communication in the Digital Age (Routledge 2017), and Heritage Wars and the Road to Reconciliation: Approaching the Problem with Confederate Memory from Many Directions (University Press of Florida forthcoming). Her best-selling interactive webtext, Central Ideas in American Government, is now in its 10th edition with Soomo Publishing and is coauthored with Kristy Michaud.


Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book offers a theoretical and practical exploration of the beach as space and place (i.e. territoriality) through three disciplinary lenses (Political Science, Geography, Art), utilizing the lens of territoriality and field-based participant cartographic mapping to understand better the ways in which the developed shoreline in Florida is territorialized. The book approaches the complex topic of territoriality on Florida’s beaches from two novel but related methods: participatory mapping/cartography and performance art. Both methods involve participants interacting with, perceiving, and ultimately representing feelings about a place. One method captures those feelings through the medium of the cartographic product (or a map), while the other leads to a set of symbols (flags), performance (actions in place) and visceral record (photography, sound, and journaling). Readers will gain insight into the role of political systems, ideological climates, local culture (including diverse cultures throughout the Florida state territory), and environmental history and challenges in shaping territoriality. The book will be of interest to a wide array of scholars working in coastal and land use planning topics at the intersection of geography, political science and art, including urban planners, land managers, and associated stakeholders dealing with ongoing tensions between private and public property rights on and near beaches.

Caracteristici

Approaches the complex topic of territoriality on Florida’s beaches Offers a theoretical and practical exploration of the beach as space and place Utilizes the lens of territoriality and field-based participant cartographic mapping