Abstract

In a wish to abandon essentialism to contingency, this paper looks into whether the rural-urban binary could be a cultural burden so incompatible with the layered realities of advanced deprivation that instead of helping the deprived, it deprives the help of its carrying capacity. Departing from the idea that cultural mechanisms are capable of allowing for conceptual dichotomies to create oppression, this paper addresses the concepts of ‘rural’ and ‘urban’ as potentially counterproductive ideas in policy and planning when deployed in areas of severe social deprivation. Using a Swedish example, this problem is addressed in the context of a recently finalized development project, whose focus of approach shifted from ‘urban’ to ‘rural’. We demonstrate how ‘rural’ and ‘urban’ are not neutral spatial qualifiers but problematic filters superimposed onto the already problematic concept of “social sustainability”. Here, we draw on the principle of iatrogenesis, which denotes any benevolent action that inadvertently produces undesired outcomes. We argue that since many areas lack the presumed conceptual foundation for a specific brand of action, development programs labeled as ‘rural’ or ‘urban’ are not only likely to fail, but also to potentially cause harm. We conclude that more context-sensitive understanding of the human condition beyond inflexible labeling is needed in order to arrive at more adequate interventions. (Less)

Highlights

  • Achieving sustainability is not merely a simple matter of ‘doing it’ by subscribing to some winning formula – there are many choices to be made in the process

  • Since any type of action requires a target area, spatial representations hold an important place in the process of conceptual filtration

  • Mirek Dymitrow and Rene Brauer: Land or people? On the iatrogenesis of conflation sometimes become problematic – if not unachievable – due to preconceived ideas about how issues associated with certain spatialities ought to be handled [9]. We explore one such case from Sweden, dealing with the implementation of ideas of an “urban development project” in a marginalized area of the city of Gothenburg

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Summary

Introduction

Achieving sustainability is not merely a simple matter of ‘doing it’ by subscribing to some winning formula – there are many choices to be made in the process. Given that conceptual frameworks always guide our thoughts, judgments and actions [1][2][3], the ways in which we relate to concepts – and especially concepts chosen to serve as matrices for specific directions of development – become expressly relevant if our aim is to create a more sustainable society. Since any type of action requires a target area, spatial representations hold an important place in the process of conceptual filtration. This is perhaps why programs designed to ease social deprivation are often differentiated on account of the target areas’ spatial classification.

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