Unit VI Social Problems of Interaction 1a
Unit VI Social Problems of Interaction 1a
When children lack social contact, they do not learn the social
skills needed to maintain health and well-being throughout
life, and to strengthen resilience in avoiding social pathology.
Positive social interactions, membership in a social support
system and a sense of belonging protect and promote good
health (House et al, 1988).
Shyness
Given the lack of real social networks, it is no surprise that children and
adolescents find difficulty in social situations. Shyness is increasingly
treated as a medical problem, termed “Social Anxiety Syndrome”, for
which medications are often prescribed – though these occasionally lead
to violence and suicide.
Lynn Henderson (Henderson and Zimbardo, accessed 2008), Director of
the Palo Alto Shyness Clinic, maintains that “this rise in shyness is
accompanied by spreading social isolation within a cultural context of
indifference to others and a lowered priority given to being sociable, or
in learning the complex network of skills necessary to be socially
competent.” She proposes this may be “a warning signal of a public
health danger that appears to be heading toward epidemic
proportions.” Lack of real life social skills may also lead young people
desperate for some form of social contact into inappropriate, predatory
or damaging exchanges in technologically mediated social networks.
Depression & Bullying
In the US, 8.3 per cent of adolescents suffer from depression
(Birmaher et al, 1996). Since young people with limited social skills
do not know how to solve problems through negotiation and
discussion, they may act self-destructively, particularly if they are
being bullied and made to feel worthless.
Combative youth lacking social skills to resolve differences, and
needing to increase their self-esteem may be violent towards
others, especially towards those who are different and who lack
social skills to defend themselves.
“as children become more alienated from the lives of others… we
can expect to see increasing levels of violence and extremism and
less collaboration and empathy.”
Children & Youth – Social Isolation
Good social skills, and the ability to take pleasure in social interaction are
fundamental to maintaining good health, to all aspects of child
development, and to achieving success and well-being later in life (Levine,
2002). Social skills do not develop automatically. They are learned in the
community social contexts in which children are raised. They learn this
through observation of how adults around them behave, and by re-
enactment of the same behaviour.
Children must learn the skills of making friends, and of maintaining
friendships. They must learn how to interact with people very different
from themselves – involving the ability to understand a person’s character,
and to distinguish between “friend” and “foe”. “The more varied and
reciprocal these interactions, the richer will be the individual’s self-image
and the more comprehensive her consciousness” (Greenspan, 1997).
Adult & Elders – Social Isolation
The opportunity for social interaction, companionship, people-watching, and a
“friendly neighbourhood” were reported as reasons why adults chose to walk in
their neighbourhood, whether to shop, run errands, recreate, or simply to get
exercise.
More active adolescents considered that the social environment and neighbours
with recreational facilities are associated with higher levels of physical activity.
Social capital at the neighbourhood level, as measured by reciprocity, trust, and
civic participation, is associated with lower neighbourhood mortality rates.
Communities with high collective efficacy, i.e. “mutual trust and a willingness to
intervene in the supervision of children and the maintenance of public order”
(Sampson et al, 1997) generally experience low homicide and violence rates and
low levels of physical and social disorder, while neighbourhoods with low
collective efficacy suffer high rates of violence and significant physical and social
disorder.
Intergenerational community
Peter Benson, President of the Search Institute observed, “Instead of
embedding our children in webs of sustained relationships, we
segregate them from the wisdom and experience of adults, raising them
in neighbourhoods, institutions, and communities where few know their
names. Instead of celebrating them as gifts of energy, passion, and hope,
we view them with suspicion in public places and places of commerce
and deny them meaningful roles in community and civic life.”
He recognized that the key problem that thwarts these efforts is that our
physical environment does not support community, and adds, “If there
were only one thing we could do to alter the course of socialization for
American youth, it would be to reconstruct our towns and cities as
intergenerational communities. Cross-generational contacts would be
frequent and natural.”
Healthy Urban Fabric
To support a healthy immune system, we must rebuild the
compact, mixed use built urban fabric characteristic of
traditional towns.
Here, people’s paths cross in multiple situations – on the way to
work or school, at the market or running errands, at a “Third
Place” or relaxing -- and in different social contexts – alone, with
family members, friends or business associates. Community
members' normal everyday lives overlap.
Meetings may lead to introductions that expand social networks.
This promotes resilience in the community's social immune
system.
Healthy Urban Fabric
A significantly greater sense of community is found in mixed use
neighbourhoods (Nasar and Julian, 1995; Leyden, 2003, Lund, 2002).
The availability of local shops and restaurants is seen by residents to be
health promoting. “The provision of decent housing, safe playing areas,
transport, green spaces, street lighting, street cleaning, schools, shops, banks,
etc. impacts upon participation in that their presence facilitates social
interaction and a ‘feel good’ sense about a place.” (Baum and Palmer, 2002).
Mehta (2007) emphasized additional factors supportive of social interaction,
such as hospitable commercial streets, mixed use streets with shops and
restaurants , wide sidewalks and a personalized public realm.
As Cozens and Hillier (2008) stressed, it requires a great many more factors
than simple street layout to create a neighbourhood that fosters social
interaction.
Healthy Urban Fabric
Frank et al (2004) showed that the greater the degree of land use mix, the
less time adults spent in cars and the lower the rate of obesity. Small city
blocks, street connectivity, mixed land uses and proximity of shops are
associated with an increase of walking (Cervero and Duncan, 2003; Duncan
and Mummery, 2004; Frank et al, 2005).
Dangerous settings discourage individuals from building social ties (Evans,
2006). Public places must be designed to feel safe as well as to prevent
criminal activity. This is achieved by encouraging a sense of ownership,
ensuring eyes on the street, maintaining active use of the space and
surrounding buildings, and controlling access (Crowe, 2000).
Even a courtyard in an apartment building can provide some support for a
significantly greater development of community among residents than exists
in an apartment building without a courtyard (Nasar and Julian, 1995).
Healthy Urban Fabric
Style of housing and land use patterns have been found to affect social
networks (Cattell, 2001) and thereby to affect health (Macintyre et al.,
1993; Macintyre and Ellaway, 1998; Macintyre and Ellaway, 1999;
Macintyre and Ellaway, 2000).
Their data showed a strong link between social interactions and ‘local
opportunity structures’—‘socially constructed and socially patterned
features of the physical and social environment which may promote
health either directly or indirectly through the possibilities they provide
for people to live healthy lives’ (Macintyre and Ellaway, 2000), p. 343].
They argue that: “Social capital is often seen to be inherent in social
interactions and social relations, but we would like to suggest that these
might be facilitated by local opportunity structures, often of a mundane
kind.” (Ibid, p. 169]
Healthy Urban Fabric
Williams and Pocock (2010) emphasize that the more informal “third places”
there are in a neighbourhood, the greater the opportunity for serendipitous
social interaction that can lead to caring relationships and social capital.
They also stress that people of different age groups need different kinds of
places that facilitate unplanned meetings.
Some third places such as cafes and bars cater to specific population groups
(adult drinkers, those who can afford to eat there) and some exclude children.
Pendola and Gen (2008) demonstrated that neighbourhoods with main streets
have a significantly higher sense of community than exists in high density
neighborhoods of suburban style neighborhoods without a main street.
Of still greater value for community social life that includes children and youth
are central public plazas open to all.
Public space design
The key element is the public realm, specifically, the availability of
community squares that support positive face-to-face social interaction
between young and old.
The intrinsic value of personal social contact consists in the boost to self-
esteem, pleasure, and sense of well-being associated with eye contact, being
acknowledged and confirmed by another human being, emotional
reciprocity, an “authentic” encounter, and knowing others are concerned and
interested in one’s well-being (Buber, 1965). “The unavowed secret of man”
stressed Buber (1967) “is that he wants to be confirmed in his being and his
existence by his fellow men and that he wishes them to make it possible for
him to confirm them.
The architects must be set the task of also building for human contact,
building surroundings that invite meeting and centres that shape meeting.”
Public space design
When located at the heart of a mixed-use neighbourhood, with a farmers
market, surrounded by shops serving daily needs, and a residential
population overlooking the square, these places are powerful catalysts in
building community, and the social support systems that protect health
(Crowhurst Lennard and Lennard, 2008).
Successful plazas are places people need to visit, or pass through on a
frequent basis to go shopping, to go to the market, or to go to work.
Only this level of use by a local community can generate the high degree of
community life required to develop inclusive community ties.
Conclusion
If we want to improve physical and mental
health, reduce social pathology, and strengthen
community “social immune systems”, then we
must rebuild our sprawling suburbs and inner
city neighbourhood's so that they support the
development.
• mandates that accredited programs include
defined course work related to human-
environment relations, including but going
beyond human factors/ergonomics.
Socio
• The “Active Living” program is often considered
the solution to all health problems. In fact, even
as cities enact “Active Living” programs to solve
obesity, they discover the programs are
ineffectual if the society is fragmented or the
individual is marginalized. Social health is the
foundation for physical health. This has serious
implications for planning and urban design. A
healthy city must have a healthy "social immune
system".
• Humans are social beings. Contact with family,
friends and social circles is not just
pleasurable, it is essential. An individual’s very
sense of self is shaped and maintained
through social life. The quality and quantity of
social interaction and sense of belonging
strongly influence physical and mental health
Today we can better understand through research how the planning,
design, and management of the built environment influence and help
shape our behaviour, attitudes, health, and well-being in settings that
range in scale from regions to rooms, and as diverse as offices, schools,
hospitals, museums, and prisons. What it has not done, however, is
eliminate the “gap” between architects and designers and social
scientists; and in particular, the fear that “evidence” will limit design
creativity (Hamilton, 2003).