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Urbani izziv Volume 30, No. 1, June 2019 : 101-113

(Articles)
UDK: 316.364.32-053.6:316.444(521.27)
doi: 10.5379/urbani-izziv-en-2019-30-01-003

 

   Article in PDF format

 

Author

Vedrana IKALOVIĆ

Vedrana Ikalović, Keio University, Department of Systems Design Engineering, Jokohama, Japonska
vedra@keio.jp

Leonardo CHIESI

University of Florence, School of Architecture, Firence, Italija
chiesi@unifi.it

 

Title

A dynamic sense of home: Spatio-temporal aspects of mobility of young Tokyo residents

 

Abstract

In highly industrialized and institutionalized societies aiming for maximum efficiency, individual activities must be synchronized with the daily rhythms of a city. As a spatial and institutional realm, the city imposes on people and influences their level of attachment, consequently altering their sense of home. This is most obvious in contemporary cities, where daily life involves movement, and where rest is often sought outside the living place, while on the move. By examining the spatial and temporal aspects of mobility of young Tokyo residents, this article explores how their sense of home and levels of attachment to the physical environment are affected by the city. It reveals a dynamic sense of home in which routes are more significant than roots and in which attachment is not restricted to a single location. Instead, it is understood as attachment to temporal and spatial relationships produced by the activities of people and institutions.

 

Key Words

sense of home, place attachment, movement, contemporary city

 

 

 

PUBLISHER

Urbanistični inštitut RS
Urbani izziv - Editorial Board
Trnovski pristan 2, 1000 Ljubljana, SLO

  + 386 (0)1 420 13 10
  urbani.izziv@uirs.si

ISSN

Print edition: 0353-6483
Web edition: 1855-8399
Professional edition: 2232-481X

INDEX

GOOGLE SCHOLAR
h5-index: 14
h5-median: 20
INDEX COPERNICUS
ICI Journals master list 2022: 121,34
CLARIVATE ANALYTICS
Indeksirano v ESCI

 

SCOPUS ELSEVIER

SCImago Journal & Country Rank

1.7
2021CiteScore
 
88th percentile
Powered by  Scopus

SNIP (2020): 0.79
CiteScoreTracker (2022): 1.8

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