( SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL) Volume 431Number 41December 1989 •
Space and Social Processes Two new projects of the Committee on ew York City and the Joint Committee on the Comparative Study of Muslim Societies by David L. Szanton* Specifying the relation hip of patial form to ocial proce e ha long been a challenge to hi torian , planner, vi ionarie ,and ocial cienti ts. Social proce e inevitably "take place" within defined patial arena , and they often give hape to tho e arenas-whether at the level of hou ehold, neighborhood, city, or nation. But given pace al 0 contrain, hape, and in variou way repre ent ocial relation , both phy ically and ymbolically. Indeed, pace , place , and phy ical tructure are regularly de igned in order to have pecific ocial effect , e.g., to fo ter or create hierarchy, community, control, or freedom of action. The arrow of influence can go in all direction . The problem of understanding the relation of patial form to ocial proce e become particularly complicated when one move to other cultural tradition -or imply through hi tory in our own-to ocietie in which the meaning of pace and phy ical form may be di tinctly different. For the Bedouin herder, the meaning of the de ert, it con traint and opportunitie , are utterly different than for the urbane Cairene, and nearly impo ible for an urban New Yorker to even imagine. But it i almo t as difficult for a New Yorker today to recon truct the meaning and value of Jefferson' vi ion of an llgrarian America. Yet de pite the ob tade to easy interpretation of patial or built form in term of ocial proce e
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(and vice versa), efforts along the e line continue to fa cinate and motivate thinker , analy t , architect , and planners. If only intuitively, many people en e that the way pace and built form are u ed and organized both reveal and hape ocial proce e or relation hip otherwi e hard to di cern. Likewi e, changing ocial form and cultural understanding can help to account for exi ting patial form and their reu e or tran formation over time. At pre ent, two different Council committee are organizing new project which attempt to pecify the interaction of patial form and ocial proce e as a mean of gaining greater in ight into both. The Committee on the Comparative Study of Mu lim Societie , jointly with the National Humanitie Center, i planning a conference, organized by Barbara D. Metcalf, University of California, Davi , on the changing patial expre ion of identity among Mu lim re iding in the We t. Small but diver e and rapidly growing communitie of Mu lim now re ide in We tern Europe, North America, and Au tralia. In contra t to many other immigrant group ,a imilation • David L. Szanton, an anthropologi t, serve taff to the Joint Committee on the Comparative Study of Mu lim Societie and the Committee on New York City.
CONTENTS OF TIllS ISSUE Space and Social Proce David L. Sum/on Neighborhoods and Communitie in Concentrated Poverty, Marthn A . G~phnrt Current Activities at the Council Board Honors Frederic E. W cman, Jr. Instructional Seminars in Sociology, Moscow
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Summer Workshop on Soviet and East European Economic 94 Staff Te tifies before Congre ional Committee 94 Working Groups of the Urban Undercl Committee 9S Recent Council Publicahon 97 Publication Guideline A~d 100 Note 101
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