Formal Open Space and its Relationship to Governance in Premodern Cities

Author(s): Alexandra Norwood

Year: 2016

Summary

Formally defined open spaces in cities give people a designated forum for interaction and impact how common people perceive each other and their authority. There is a critical lack of understanding of the origin of these spaces in the earliest cities and their social contexts. I will examine a sample of premodern cities, including archaeologically and historically documented examples, to clarify why formal open spaces exist, both in ancient cities and modern ones. This project stems from "Service Access in Premodern Cities" at ASU, a project dedicated to transdisciplinary research on comparative urbanism. Each of the cities in this projects have been scored on a scale of governance based on that of Blanton and Fargher (2007).I will measure the formal open space in these cities using GIS. Relating plaza area to the size of the city and the form of governance will show whether or not plazas can be classified as a public good according to Blanton and Fargher’s classification and whether cross-cultural patterns exist regarding the relationship of governance to public space. A more complex understanding of the dynamics of early cities and their governance is critical to understanding the evolution of both human society and the modern city.

Cite this Record

Formal Open Space and its Relationship to Governance in Premodern Cities. Alexandra Norwood. Presented at The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Orlando, Florida. 2016 ( tDAR id: 404641)

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