Particular Interests

 

Attempts by particular professions or disciplines to define social and· biophysical reality in a particular way are a necessary characteristic of collective action. At the same time, they invariably express to some degree the particular interests of the group involved. The challenge faced by any critically aware practitioner or academic is to recognize the inevitability of this linkage, yet at the same time to maintain a personal commitment to informed and responsible social action.

Simon Swaffield, Roles and Meanings of “Landscape” (1991)

Grant Associates + Wilkinson Eyre Architects, Gardens by the Bay (2011)

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