4.6 Article

Valorizing Community Identity and Social Places to Implement Participatory Processes in San Giovanni a Teduccio (Naples, Italy)

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 15, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su151914216

Keywords

participatory processes; cultural heritage; social regeneration; community identity; community places

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This paper explores the implementation of an intervention in San Giovanni a Teduccio, aimed at promoting participatory processes for acknowledging and valuing local social, cultural, and identity resources. The study reveals a split community, with a minority actively engaged in community regeneration and a majority passively affected by nostalgia. The research emphasizes the importance of involving citizens in recognizing and enhancing local resources through participatory approaches, which was communicated to the wider community through an exhibition.
This paper addresses the implementation of an intervention aimed at promoting participatory processes in San Giovanni a Teduccio-a neighborhood on the eastern outskirts of Naples-to foster the acknowledgment and valorization of local social, cultural, and identity resources by citizens. Former industrial and marine area, today disused and run-down industrial establishments in the neighborhood and obscure and pollute the sea, weakening local identity and cultural heritages. Interviews were carried out to address citizens' and stakeholders' social identity, their civic and social engagement in the community, and the potential and critical issues they identified in it. A split community emerged from their words, with a minority civically and socially engaged in the regeneration of community places and relationships-even though through a fragmented multiplicity of projects-and a dormant majority, passive and anesthetized by the nostalgia of the industrial and marine past. Participants were also asked to share pictures about meaningful community places; these showed abandoned and run-down urban spaces, but also places where citizens could meet, share, and identify. An exhibition was organized to share these materials with the broader community, opening up a space for thinking about the need to involve citizens in acknowledging and valorizing local cultural, social, and identity resources through participatory processes.

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