Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach

The transition to a place-based approach in urban regeneration has heightened the significance of increasing inclusion and capability for participatory governance, collaborative planning, and implementation of projects. Within place branding and global city competitions, smaller placemaking efforts...

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Published in:IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science
Main Author: Qamaruz Zaman N.; Kamarudin H.; Bakri A.F.; Nik Azhari N.F.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: Institute of Physics 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85142236947&doi=10.1088%2f1755-1315%2f1067%2f1%2f012035&partnerID=40&md5=487a0377b0541bd031e75745626d03cd
id 2-s2.0-85142236947
spelling 2-s2.0-85142236947
Qamaruz Zaman N.; Kamarudin H.; Bakri A.F.; Nik Azhari N.F.
Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach
2022
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science
1067
1
10.1088/1755-1315/1067/1/012035
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85142236947&doi=10.1088%2f1755-1315%2f1067%2f1%2f012035&partnerID=40&md5=487a0377b0541bd031e75745626d03cd
The transition to a place-based approach in urban regeneration has heightened the significance of increasing inclusion and capability for participatory governance, collaborative planning, and implementation of projects. Within place branding and global city competitions, smaller placemaking efforts have become an increasingly popular approach in urban regeneration, especially in the historic urban centres worldwide, including George Town, Ipoh and Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia. However, placemaking is a complex and ambiguous concept that may operate within the formal planning structure, or grow organically from the grassroots or appear in protests to a particular development due to emotional connection to particular places. Internal factors such as social-cultural, economic, political, and governance characteristics inside places were claimed to affect the ambiguity of placemaking, as were external variables such as global connections and market trends. This paper discusses the ethnography of case studies methodology adopted to understand the interaction between government-market-civil society nexus that shaped distinctive models of placemaking within the urban regeneration agenda in the historic cities mentioned above. Overt participant observation and semi-structured interviews were used in this research to gather real-life data on participatory placemaking from a constructivist and interpretivism epistemological stance. This paper provides a detailed description of the steps and processes of ethnographic research in the built environment, which may encourage other researchers who believe that 'urban centres are constructed by the multiple realities of their context, which requires an emphatic understanding of human action' to adopt a similar methodology. © 2022 Institute of Physics Publishing. All rights reserved.
Institute of Physics
17551307
English
Conference paper
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Qamaruz Zaman N.; Kamarudin H.; Bakri A.F.; Nik Azhari N.F.
spellingShingle Qamaruz Zaman N.; Kamarudin H.; Bakri A.F.; Nik Azhari N.F.
Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach
author_facet Qamaruz Zaman N.; Kamarudin H.; Bakri A.F.; Nik Azhari N.F.
author_sort Qamaruz Zaman N.; Kamarudin H.; Bakri A.F.; Nik Azhari N.F.
title Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach
title_short Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach
title_full Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach
title_fullStr Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach
title_sort Exploring Participatory Placemaking in Malaysia Using Embedded Ethnographies with Practitioners Approach
publishDate 2022
container_title IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science
container_volume 1067
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1088/1755-1315/1067/1/012035
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85142236947&doi=10.1088%2f1755-1315%2f1067%2f1%2f012035&partnerID=40&md5=487a0377b0541bd031e75745626d03cd
description The transition to a place-based approach in urban regeneration has heightened the significance of increasing inclusion and capability for participatory governance, collaborative planning, and implementation of projects. Within place branding and global city competitions, smaller placemaking efforts have become an increasingly popular approach in urban regeneration, especially in the historic urban centres worldwide, including George Town, Ipoh and Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia. However, placemaking is a complex and ambiguous concept that may operate within the formal planning structure, or grow organically from the grassroots or appear in protests to a particular development due to emotional connection to particular places. Internal factors such as social-cultural, economic, political, and governance characteristics inside places were claimed to affect the ambiguity of placemaking, as were external variables such as global connections and market trends. This paper discusses the ethnography of case studies methodology adopted to understand the interaction between government-market-civil society nexus that shaped distinctive models of placemaking within the urban regeneration agenda in the historic cities mentioned above. Overt participant observation and semi-structured interviews were used in this research to gather real-life data on participatory placemaking from a constructivist and interpretivism epistemological stance. This paper provides a detailed description of the steps and processes of ethnographic research in the built environment, which may encourage other researchers who believe that 'urban centres are constructed by the multiple realities of their context, which requires an emphatic understanding of human action' to adopt a similar methodology. © 2022 Institute of Physics Publishing. All rights reserved.
publisher Institute of Physics
issn 17551307
language English
format Conference paper
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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