A Systematic Literature Review of Applied Methods for Assessing the Effects of Public Open Spaces on Immigrants’ Place Attachment
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Screening and Selection Process
- Articles that focus on the effects of public open spaces on immigrants’ place attachment, belonging to places, place meaning, place adaptation, place integration, or place inclusion.
- Articles conducted at public open places, public spaces, public places, open spaces, streets, plazas, squares, green spaces, gardens, parks, rivers, lakes, public beaches, sports fields, or everyday public places.
- Articles that mentioned two of three specified keywords when it was unclear whether they referred to the topic.
- Articles that do not focus on the effects of public open spaces on immigrants’ place attachment.
2.2. Classification and Analysis
- -
- -
- -
- Place social bonding is an interpersonal relationship that happens in a place [46].
- -
2.3. Limitations
3. Results
3.1. Geographical Distribution
3.2. Immigrants’ Nationalities
3.3. Types of Public Open Spaces
3.4. Research Methods
3.5. Place Attachment Evaluation
3.6. Architectural Practices and Benefits
- The second benefit concerns the creation of user-centred and inclusive public places since most of these methods analyse immigrants’ needs and activities to create inclusive public places and increase their place attachment. Architects and urban designers may benefit from this knowledge to extract design guidelines and recommendations for inclusive and user-centred public places.
4. Discussion
4.1. Gaps, Advantages, and Disadvantages
- This research refers to immigrants’ needs and activities in public places, which can help urban designers and policymakers in understanding the needs and aspirations of communities.
- The tangible features of public places which lead to immigrants’ place attachment are mentioned in Table 3. These features can provide design guidelines to shape urban design policies.
- This study will inform urban designers and policymakers aiming to increase social interaction and inclusion in public spaces. Table 3 shows that immigrants’ place attachment will be increased due to features and factors that support social interactions in public places.
- Many of the reviewed articles referred to the effects of green public places on immigrants’ place attachment. The research can contribute to urban design policies that promote sustainability in public places.
4.2. Direction for Future Research
- Firstly, it can access a wider range of perspective on place attachment and public places. Users from different cultures and regions that have different languages may have unique theories, concepts, and approaches to discover the relationships between users and their built environments.
- Secondly, it enables comparisons between different cultures and geographical contexts in order to distinguish similarities and differences in public places factors influencing place attachment.
- Finally, it may offer new research methodologies and data collection techniques applied in studies conducted in other languages.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Destination Countries | Research | Immigrants’ Nationality |
---|---|---|
UK | [67] | Different countries (not specified) |
[68] | Yemen, Iraq, Jamaica, Pakistan, Somalia | |
[69] | Yemen, Iraq, Jamaica, Pakistan, Somalia | |
[70] | 13 countries (not specified) | |
[71] | Turkey, Guyana, Jamaica, Ghana, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Wale, and other | |
[72] | Latin American countries | |
The Netherlands | [64] | Syria |
[73] | Turkey, Morocco | |
USA | [1] | Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, other |
[74] | African and Latin American countries (not specified) | |
[75] | Korea, Guatemala, Mexico, EL Salvador, Bangladesh, Thailand, Armenia, and other | |
Canada | [76] | Different countries (not specified) |
[77] | Different countries (not specified) | |
Iran | [4] | Afghanistan |
[62] | India | |
Saudi Arabia | [78] | Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Sudan, South Africa, Chad, United Arab Emirates, USA, Palestine, Yemen, Philippines |
Turkey | [79] | Afghanistan, Syria |
Finland | [80] | Arab countries (not specified), Russia, Somalia |
Australia | [81] | Different countries (not specified) |
Germany | [63] | Turkey |
Belgium | [66] | Turkey |
Switzerland | [65] | Spain |
USA, Poland, The Netherlands, and Germany | [57] | USA: Latin America and China Poland: Ukraine, and Vietnam The Netherlands: Morocco Germany: Turkey |
[58] | China, Latin America, Morocco, Turkey, Ukraine, Vietnam | |
Germany and France | [59] | Different countries (not specified) |
Articles (Newest–Oldest) | Research Question | Interview | Walking/Photo Voice | Literature Review | Questionnaire | Taking Picture | Drawing | Observation | Cognitive Mapping | Focus Group | Probe | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[80] 2022 | In Turku, how does the foreign-background population experience urban nature? How does nature contribute to their integration and well-being? | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||||||
[70] 2021 | What can different immigrants’ voices (narratives) tell us about their urban nature experiences? | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[4] 2021 | How do immigrants link to contemporary and historical parks to bond with these places? What is the difference between the parks for immigrants? | ✔ | On site | ||||||||||
[77] 2021 | What are the comfortable or uncomfortable places experienced by immigrant women in Red Deer as they settled in and settled down? What do immigrant women’s senses of comfortable and uncomfortable places indicate about their settlement needs, and how can these needs be better satisfied? How do immigrant women’s senses of place manifest within the social, individual, and physical spaces in Red Deer? | ✔ | ✔ | Photo voice | |||||||||
[71] 2020 | How do immigrants in Tottenham negotiate their experiences and belonging in everyday activities in a highly diverse neighbourhood? | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[62] 2020 | How are Indians integrated into the Baharestan neighbourhood in Tehran, Iran, and which factors have effects on their integration? | ✔ | On site | ||||||||||
[75] 2019 | To what extent do attempts at creating a publicly recognized identity in urban space contribute to immigrants’ sense of place attachment? Furthermore, to what specific places do immigrants build place attachment in urban areas characterized by overlapping racial and ethnic minority populations? | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[66] 2019 | How do immigrant women try to re-enact and renegotiate places to pursue their interpersonal connections within the new environment (a neighbourhood)? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[79] 2019 | What is the effect of cultural differences due to migration on the usage of public open spaces (squares)? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[60] 2019 | How can the connection between integration and nature be understood? What integration-related advantages may nature provide for integration? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[64] 2018 | How do Syrian refugees negotiate differences through encounters with everyday neighbourhood places in the Northern Netherlands to improve or impede a sense of belonging? | ✔ | walking | ||||||||||
[78] 2018 | What differences can be distinguished between Saudi and immigrant residents in Jeddah concerning their use of outdoor public spaces? How are place attachment and values of public space shaped by displacement? | ✔ | On site | ✔ | |||||||||
[76] 2018 | How do young immigrants experience social inclusion during their first years of settlement in a mid-sized Canadian city (Windsor, Ontario)? | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[81] 2018 | In public places in Tasmania, do groups of individuals have similar spatial attachment patterns? Are their attachments to places socially or environmentally determined and differently motivated? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[74] 2017 | How do Latino immigrant men make sense of place for themselves in the inner-city public gardens and parks of Los Angeles? What does this do for them? How can activities and experiences improve their integration? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[58] 2017 | What is the role of leisure in natural settings (city parks, forest preserves, and gardens) in improving immigrants’ adaptation, focusing on interracial/interethnic interactions? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[57] 2016 | How does using natural environments for leisure contribute to developing a sense of belonging among immigrants? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[67] 2015 | How might ‘nonlocal’ students interpret their sense of place to pre-determined fluid routes within their term-time location? | ✔ | Walking | ||||||||||
[72] 2015 | How does a group of immigrants living in sociocultural invisibility conditions distinguish their daily ways of belonging and emotional processes that combine their present and past senses of self? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[69] 2013 | How are familiar and strange aspects of the everyday local environment for immigrants in the first steps of settlement? What are forms of remembering stimulated by the embodied qualities of using outdoor places? How are emotional dimensions of place attachment developed by experiencing different outdoor places at a neighbourhood and city scale? | ✔ | Walking voice | ||||||||||
[1] 2013 | What are the meanings of urban public spaces (a park) in a context that received less attention? | ✔ | On site | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||
[68] 2012 | How much familiarity and participation in the public realm improve the place attachment after immigration? What is the relationship between transnational identities and engagement with various urban localities? | ✔ | ✔ | Walking voice | |||||||||
[65] 2011 | What are Spanish immigrants’ emotional attachments and everyday life experiences in places in Switzerland? | ✔ | |||||||||||
[59] 2010 | How do children from different immigration backgrounds improve their local belongings in large Western European cities? (I.e., their route from home to school and their neighbourhoods) | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||||
[73] 2010 | Can social interaction promote social cohesion by looking at the use of public spaces (urban parks) and the specific characteristics of the interactions in these spaces? Which urban parks improve social cohesion, and how may social interaction and place attachment contribute to social cohesion? | ✔ | On site | ✔ | ✔ | ||||||||
[63] 2005 | How do Turkish immigrants create belonging to public places in a neighbourhood in a German city? | ✔ |
Article | Place Attachment Evaluation | Dimensions | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Features and Factors | Place Dependence | Place Affect | Place Social Bond | Place Identity | |
[57] | 1. History: historical connections to natural environments in:
| 10 | |||
2. Place: different natural environments, distance, access, physical features (safety, cleanness, inviting, natural or artificial). | 10 | ||||
3. People: social interaction, safety, and crime experience (fear). | 10 | 10 | |||
[86] | 1. Distinctiveness: people being recognized by other people. | 0 | 10 | ||
2. Continuity and memory: choose locations and activities like their countries. | * | ||||
3. Self-esteem: good and bad experiences of place (emotive value). | 10 | ||||
4. Self-efficacy: finding new places to visit and socializing in new public places. | 10 | ||||
[4] | 1. Place dependency: practical use, visual appreciation, tangible elements. | 10 | |||
2. Place attachment: feelings and emotions, safety and privacy, individual preferences, social bonding, and gathering. | 10 | 10 | |||
3. Place identity: memory and meaning, history (historical elements), familiarity. | 10 | ||||
[1] | 1. Continuity/Discontinuity: places (not) like home country, meaningful places. | 10 | |||
2. Community/Isolation: social meanings. | 10 | ||||
3. Restoration/Disturbance: physical elements lead to relaxation, distraction, amusement, entertainment, annoyance, disgust, and anger. | 10 | 10 | |||
4. Safety/Insecurity: streetlight, fence, dangerous at night, crime. | * | * | |||
5. Freedom/Unity: feel free, relax, gender restrictions, and prohibited activities. | * | ||||
[74] | 1. Sanctuary and solace | 10 | |||
2. Experiences of themselves: responsible men | 10 | ||||
3. Sovereignty and sociability of male | 10 | ||||
4. Belonging and feeling at home (identity) | * | ||||
5. An emergent civic culture: community, develop their skills | * | ||||
6. Referred to facilities and tangible elements | 5 | ||||
[81] | Immigrants’ reasons for place attachment: | ||||
1. Location of the family home, childhood memories, a venue for family holidays, and recreational activities. | 5 | 5 | 5 | ||
2. Familiarity, a significant life event, a symbol of homecoming. | * | ||||
3. Built environment, historical significance, aboriginal cultural connection, association with the community, cultural significance, beauty, spirituality, and nature connection. | * | * | 5 | ||
[78] | 1. A longing for freedom and simplicity: A less materialistic place. | ||||
| 10 | ||||
| 10 | ||||
2. Places like the home country: memory of home country with same physical elements (e.g., trees, water, and sky), emotional connection. | * | 10 | |||
3. Viewpoints of loss: places create memories of loss and longing (e.g., historical places and activities that happen in places). | * | ||||
4. Physical elements | 5 | ||||
[68] | 1. Familiarisation and participation: develop knowledge of the place, interactions, and identity. | 10 | 10 | ||
2. Providing a social position and self-identity | * | * | |||
3. Interaction or escape: socialize, feel safe, warm, and relaxed. | 10 | * | |||
4. Movement provides alternatives: opportunities and adventures, socializing, self-identity, feeling stress, better facilities, and less crime. | 10 | * | * | ||
[69] | 1. Recollection and normality: familiarisation (places and landmarks like their countries), making memories. | 0 | 10 | ||
2. Social interactions and embodied experiences: connections, relaxation, identity, and expression of spirituality. | 10 | 10 | * | ||
3. Time passing and place attachment: opinions about staying or leaving places, emotions changed to the places, shaped memories of places, experience different places. | * | * | |||
[58] | 1. Psychological adaptation: | 0 | |||
| 10 | ||||
| * | ||||
| 10 | 10 | |||
2. Socio-cultural adaptation: | |||||
| * | ||||
| * | ||||
[70] | 1. Engagement with the weather: sensory responses. | 0 | 10 | ||
2. Care and nature: transnational (sometimes nostalgic) practices. | 10 | ||||
3. Transnational identities and nature relations | * | ||||
4. Social context | 5 | ||||
[76] | 1. Sense of inclusion and exclusion in public places | 0 | 10 | 0 | |
2. Emotion: feel welcoming. | 5 | ||||
[59] | 1. Landmarks and cultural symbols | ||||
2. Places of fear and neglect or social bonding and play | 10 | 10 | |||
3. Segregated urban structures and children’s networks and activities: access, facilities, and social networks. | 10 | ||||
4. The imagined ‘homeland’ and nostalgic places | 10 | ||||
[77] | 1. Comfortable places: | 5 | |||
| |||||
| 10 | 10 | 10 | ||
| * | ||||
| * | ||||
2. Uncomfortable places: | |||||
| * | * | |||
| * | ||||
[72] | Making self-identification: | ||||
1. Places for religious groups (church). | 10 | ||||
2. The experiences of inclusion and exclusion. Memories in places. | 10 | * | |||
3. Lack of places for celebrations and cultural events. | 10 | ||||
4. Places lead to emotional bonds. | 10 | ||||
[65] | An emotional approach to place: | 0 | 10 | ||
1. Place of identification: with symbolic power and experienced emotional moments, connected to memories, meaningful and favourite places. | * | 10 | |||
2. Place of daily actions: living, working, socializing. | 10 | ||||
[71] | 1. Belonging to society (politics): | 0 | |||
| 10 | ||||
| 10 | 10 | |||
2. Belonging to place: feel at home (identity), have memories, social inclusion and exclusion, self-esteem, and self-efficacy. | * | * | * | ||
[75] | 1. Cultural assets and cultural traditions, festivals, and the symbolics of place identity. | 0 | 0 | 10 | |
2. Socializing places and social cohesion in the neighbourhood | 10 | ||||
[64] | 1. Social interactions in transitory spaces: social ties refer to emotion. | 0 | 5 | 10 | |
2. Social interaction in the third space: inclusion and exclusion (socially and economically), refer to emotion and feelings. | * | * | |||
3. Create a sense of belonging in a new place: make their places and memories, go to places like their home country (e.g., Turkish markets), and feel at home (identity, remembering). | 10 | ||||
[66] | Social identity: | 0 | 10 | ||
1. Language skills | * | ||||
2. Gender tension | * | ||||
3. Importance of belonging: feel at home (familiarity), comfort, security, and social connections, expressing themselves in the neighbourhood (e.g., speech, dressing, and behaviour). | 10 | * | 10 | ||
[63] | 1. Consumption tie: e.g., main shopping streets with shops from their country, feel excluded from other markets in the host country. | 10 | |||
2. Belonging to the religious community: e.g., mosque. | 10 | ||||
3. Belonging to social places where immigrants of the same nationality go: e.g., teahouses in the neighbourhood. | * | ||||
4. Change facades and make them for their own culture: e.g., adding satellite dishes to see Turkish TVs. | 10 | ||||
5. Make their own home and neighbourhood: e.g., buy houses, feel safe, and feel comfortable. | 5 | * | |||
[62] | Social integration: | 10 | |||
1. Social (and emotional): social contact, inter-ethnic friendships, partnerships, participation in social organizations, intermarriage, and emotional and spiritual ties. | 10 | * | |||
2. Cultural: a sense of belonging, language skills, formation of identity, attitude to the rules and values of the host society, and media use. | 10 | ||||
3. Economic: income and employment, new economic activities. | |||||
4. Political: participation in power and election. | * | ||||
5. Structural (socio-economic): health, housing, income level, social access, educational attainment, and involvement in the labour market. | 10 | ||||
[80] | 1. Nature experience: social, emotional, normative (refer to needs). | 10 | 10 | 10 | |
2. Integration: interactive, identificational, cognitive. | * | 10 | |||
[73] | Social cohesion: 1. Intention of activities and social interactions, the meaning of behaviour, and perspectives on other ethnic groups. | 0 | 10 | 0 | |
2. Referred to feelings: comfortable, acceptance, feeling at home (relaxed). | 5 | ||||
[79] | 1. Frequency and duration of use. | 10 | 0 | ||
2. Activities and preferences: sitting, resting, meeting, getting information, ceremony, watching, listening to music, reading, taking photos, riding a bike, skating, and stand-date. | * | 10 | 10 | ||
3. Opinions of users: represent history, socializing, use easily, presence of foreigners, activities, and accessories. | * | * | |||
[60] | 1. Structural integration: access to nature and recreational activities, physiological well-being, stress relief, and feeling comfortable. | 10 | 10 | ||
2. Cultural integration | |||||
3. Interactive integration: social interactions. | 10 | ||||
4. Identificational integration: a sense of nostalgia. | 10 | ||||
Ranking of each dimension of place attachment by the compilation of points for the reviewed literature | 135 | 225 | 250 | 220 |
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Ghasemieshkaftaki, M.; Dupre, K.; Fernando, R. A Systematic Literature Review of Applied Methods for Assessing the Effects of Public Open Spaces on Immigrants’ Place Attachment. Architecture 2023, 3, 270-293. https://doi.org/10.3390/architecture3020016
Ghasemieshkaftaki M, Dupre K, Fernando R. A Systematic Literature Review of Applied Methods for Assessing the Effects of Public Open Spaces on Immigrants’ Place Attachment. Architecture. 2023; 3(2):270-293. https://doi.org/10.3390/architecture3020016
Chicago/Turabian StyleGhasemieshkaftaki, Marzieh, Karine Dupre, and Ruwan Fernando. 2023. "A Systematic Literature Review of Applied Methods for Assessing the Effects of Public Open Spaces on Immigrants’ Place Attachment" Architecture 3, no. 2: 270-293. https://doi.org/10.3390/architecture3020016
APA StyleGhasemieshkaftaki, M., Dupre, K., & Fernando, R. (2023). A Systematic Literature Review of Applied Methods for Assessing the Effects of Public Open Spaces on Immigrants’ Place Attachment. Architecture, 3(2), 270-293. https://doi.org/10.3390/architecture3020016