Essays about: "Setha Low"

Found 3 essays containing the words Setha Low.

  1. 1. The construction of identity : An urban study of the Centrums of Rinkeby, Tensta and Husby

    University essay from KTH/Urbana och regionala studier

    Author : Sandra Mekler; Ambre Alfredo; [2019]
    Keywords : Collective identity; Public Space; Neighbourhood Centers; Immigrant Community; Suburban Stockholm;

    Abstract : The Stockholm Municipality has set inclusion at the core of its objectives for the city with its “Vision 2040: A Stockholm for Everyone” (Stockholm Stad, 2018). Acknowledging the divide between neighborhoods, the government has brought forward social sustainability as a key component to improve the fast-growing city. READ MORE

  2. 2. The production of space : An urban study of the Centrums of Rinkeby, Tensta and Husby

    University essay from KTH/Urbana och regionala studier

    Author : Simon Fique; [2019]
    Keywords : collective identity; public space; neighborhood centers; migrant community;

    Abstract : The Stockholm Municipality has set inclusion at the core of its objectives for the city with its “Vision 2040: A Stockholm for Everyone”. Acknowledging the divide between neighborhoods, the government has brought forward social sustainability as a key component to improve the fast- growing city. READ MORE

  3. 3. The inclusion and exclusion of Somali communities as seen through the publicness of space in Nairobi and Stockholm

    University essay from KTH/Urbana och regionala studier

    Author : Julia Bürgi; [2018]
    Keywords : Somali; public space; Setha Low; Nairobi; Stockholm; technologies of control; flourishing society; inclusion; exclusion;

    Abstract : The neighborhoods of Eastleigh in Nairobi, Kenya and Rinkeby in Stockholm, Sweden are both home to Somali populations that have burgeoned over the last 25 years. While situated in vastly different urban contexts, the Somali communities in each location have needs related to public space, particularly when considering their status in both places as a minority group that is often marginalized by Kenyan and Swedish societies. READ MORE