Against an adjetived urbanism
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24197/ciudades.02.1995.25-46Keywords:
urbanism, historical constructionAbstract
We start from the hypothesis that historical construction of the city is framed in a dialectical proccess whose two fundamental components are, on the one hand, those that answer requirements of a social and political leaning (a city, in that sense, is a spatial complex historically demanded, depending on some specific class interests) and, on the other hand, those that obey determinants of a technical-functional leaning, measured, in general, in terms of spatial territory.
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