Children in the City – Tim Gill in Conversation

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Date/Time
Date(s) - 09/07/2008
6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

Location
Royal Commonwealth Society,


Jane Jacobs conversation 9 July 2008 introduced by Tim Gill

Jane Jacobs in The Death and Life of Great American Cities was concerned with what makes big cities safe and enjoyable places to live. For her, the key difference between cities and smaller settlements is that they are “by definition, full of strangers” (p.30). Jacobs asked how it can come about that people live happily amongst so many strangers. Her answer was that cities depend upon everyday life at street level: “the bedrock attribute of a successful city district is that a person must feel personally safe and secure on the street among all these strangers” (p.30).

In Chapter 4 of the book, and no doubt in response to contemporary worries, Jacobs turned to the question of how children grow up in cities. Her key argument states, “the first fundamental of successful city life [is that] people must take a modicum of public responsibility for each other even if they have no ties to each other.” And she goes on: “this is a lesson nobody learns by being told. It is learned from the experience of having other people without ties of kinship or close friendship or formal responsibility to you take a modicum of responsibility for you” (p. 82, emphasis in original).

Chapter 4 explores two questions: how do children grow up to be good citizens of big cities? And what is the role of the built environment in this process? Jacobs’ answers are that children must have everyday, relatively spontaneous contact with adults in their neighbourhoods beyond home and school; and that there should be places very close to children’s homes where this everyday contact can take place.

Jacobs’ paradigmatic ‘place of socialization’ is of course the busy sidewalk of a city street, as provocatively signalled by the title of Chapter 4 (the uses of sidewalks: assimilating children). She is contemptuous about parks and playgrounds, dismissing as a ‘fantasy’ the idea that they are inherently wholesome or happy places (p. 74).

Jacobs was writing in the early 1960s, but her concerns are strikingly resonant today. Health experts warn about the rise in childhood obesity and mental health problems, while children’s behaviour in public is becoming the focus of a nationwide moral panic. In the capital, the new Mayor of London has declared that young people will be his top priority, amidst an apparent surge in violent crime amongst teenagers. While some of these concerns might be overplayed, it is hard to avoid the sense that things are not well with the nation’s children, and especially those growing up in cities.

And yet the communitarian vision of city child rearing put forward by Jacobs is out of favour. The Government’s Children’s Plan includes new funding for play facilities, but the money is probably headed for the segregated provision she despised. Other responses have focused on a

mix of punitive measures (ASBOs, dispersal orders and the like) educational initiatives (in schools and youth provision) and parenting programmes.

Some questions to consider:

  •   Is Jacobs right about the role of everyday interactions betweenchildren and adults in nurturing a sense of responsibility and mutualtrust?
  •   If she is, what prospects are there for fostering such experiences incities today?
  •   Can streets ever have this role – and if not, can any other publicspaces?
  •   Or has Jacobs simply misunderstood the forces that shape futuregenerations of city-dwellers?
    Join us at this conversation to share views and ideas.Jane Jacobs conversation: reading
    The first reading is all but essential: the rest are optional.Jacobs J (1961) The Death and Life of Great American Cities
    Chapter 4 (pp.74 – 88)
    Chapters 2 and 3 are also useful. (Chapter 1, in which Jacobs sets out the target of her attack on top-down city planning, is not particularly relevant to the topic under discussion.)

    Ward C (1978) The Child in the City

    Beunderman J, Hannon C and Bradwell P (2007) Seen and Heard: Reclaiming the public realm with children and young people
    Esp. chapters 1 and 2 (pp.24 – 49).
    Available as a pdf from the website www.demos.co.uk.

    Gill T (2007) No Fear: Growing up in a risk averse society
    Esp. chapters 1 (background and context) and 5 (beyond risk aversion) Available as a pdf fromhttp://www.gulbenkian.org.uk/publications/education/no-fear

    You might also want to browse some of the comment pieces I have written on the Guardian’s Comment is Free website:http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/timgill

    Tim Gill, writer and consultant

    www.rethinkingchildhood.com


    “Conversations on Future Lifestyles”: Talk it Through, Make it Happen.

    Rethinking Cities Ltd. host “Conversations on Future Lifestyles”, a series of thought-provoking, inspiring and creative discussions on lifestyles and their impact on urban living. Such a Conversation is an opportunity to meet fellow professionals, to share opinions, and contribute to interesting debates on topical issues. Collective problem solving. A briefing paper is distributed to participants one week before the conversation and a guest speaker is invited to introduce the topic.

    Conversations take place early in an evening, at a convenient central London location, approximately once a quarter, and last for between 50 and 90 minutes. They are hosted by an experienced facilitator, and participation is limited to ten people, ensuring intimacy and an opportunity for everyone to have a chance to contribute.

    “Wise people like Raban (author of Soft City) learn things  about cities and communicate them, but then are more or less forgotten.  Revisiting them is a real service, and the Conversation was very stimulating,  to me at least. The Homes & Communities Academy should fund you to hold hundreds of Conversations, as an alternative to reinventing the wheel.” Rob Cowan, former Director of the Urban Design Group

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