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2011 | 10 |

Article title

OBIEKTY NIMBY JAKO PRZYKŁAD KONFLIKTOWYCH INWESTYCJI NA TERENACH MIESZKANIOWYCH – TEORETYCZNY ZARYS PROBLEMU

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
The term NIMBY stands for English Not In My BackYard and describes the attitude of people who disagree with location in their closest neighbourhood of both dangerous facilities and facilities resulting in great loss for local people. What is characteristic about NIMBY syndrome, compared to other social conflicts, is the fact that it concerns facilities (investments) which are seen rather negatively, however, they are socially acceptable and the problem is only about the location. NIMBY facilities are the subject of dispute which is accompanied by the specific – NIMBY syndrome attitude of local society and therefore makes the conflict rather unique among other functional and spatial conflicts. NIMBY facilities are unwanted and perceived to be noxious in a particular location. The conflict seems to appear when the distance between a controversial object and a residential area is too short. The following article is to show specific aspects of NIMBY syndrome and NIMBY facilities in accordance to current research that mainly covered social conflicts in general terms. It must be emphasized that the basis of the analysis was the scientific works which have been predominantly published in English. Polish output has generally dealt with case study, which has been about particular examples of the conflicts in Polish cities. The development of council, collective and private housing industry is a good reason to start doing some research into Polish NIMBY syndrome and facilities. Numerous protests generated around unwanted facilities put opponents as well as investors (local authorities and private investors) to some expense.

Year

Volume

10

Physical description

Dates

published
2011

Contributors

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11089/1825

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.hdl_11089_1825
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