Democratic public space involves complex relationships between ownership, agency, occupation, control, and freedom. It is intertwined with Concept of Social Space and Geographical Space as well. Authors Nahal Sohbati, Academy of Art University, San Francisco, Studying for Masters of Landscape Architecture Rivka Weinstock, University of Pennsylvania, Studying for Masters of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning…
The project of direct democracy, being a socio-political system that is incompatible with the Nation-State-Capital complex, implies radical change to people's relations to physical space.