Civics In A Year

Place Shapes Civics


Listen Later

Your city is not just where you live. It is a political education you walk through every day.

We sit down with Dr. John Harner, professor of geography and environmental studies, to connect cultural geography to civic engagement in the United States. We unpack what “place” really means, including place identity (the image a community projects through architecture, branding, and design rules) and sense of place (the personal ties that make us feel rooted). When those pieces work together, people feel valued, connected, and more willing to show up for local politics, volunteer work, and community problem-solving.

Then we follow the thread into the built environment: public spaces that welcome everyone versus landscapes that exclude. We talk about placelessness, the spread of disposable, look-alike development, and how car-centered suburban design can weaken a sense of belonging. From there, we explore how politics can shape place through regulation, sprawl, and privatized enclaves, and how those landscapes can reinforce ideas about property, public services, and community responsibility.

We also zoom out to economic and social forces, linking spatial mobility to social mobility through housing choice, transportation access, and opportunity. Finally, we turn to border regions and the US-Mexico border as dynamic spaces where identity, citizenship, and political boundaries are constantly negotiated, and where proximity can foster empathy and compromise.

If you want smarter conversations about urban planning, civic life, and how place shapes political identity, listen now, then subscribe, share this episode with a friend, and leave a review. What place has shaped your worldview the most?

Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum!


School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership

Center for American Civics



...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Civics In A YearBy The Center for American Civics