RT Article T1 Mediated conviviality and the urban social order: reframing the regulation of public space JF The British journal of criminology VO 57 IS 4 SP 848 OP 866 A1 Barker, Anna LA English YR 2017 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1565067959 AB The regulation of public space is influenced greatly by debates about crime, disorder and (in)security. This paper challenges certain assumptions that inform a number of competing mentalities regarding the regulation of public spaces drawn from within the fields of criminology and urban studies, notably ‘preventive exclusion’, ‘reassurance policing’ and the ‘right to the city’. It harnesses interdisciplinary insights from real-world examples to reframe and advance debates about the future regulation of public space, conceptualized in this paper as ‘mediated conviviality’. It argues that social order is not spontaneous but needs to be facilitated. This perspective simultaneously decentres crime and (in)security as central organizing concepts and recognizes the importance of safety to the development of a convivial public realm, with implications for practical strategies of urban governance. K1 Conviviality K1 Public space K1 Regulation K1 Mediator K1 Social order DO 10.1093/bjc/azw029