Data underlying the publication: Social Roles in Circular Commons: Insights from Seven Urban Case Studies
DOI: 10.4121/38db252b-79af-476f-a803-e35330e2d0cd
Datacite citation style
Dataset
Categories
Licence Restrictive Licence
This dataset supports the publication in the Special Issue Urban Dialogics of the journal Urban Studies (SAGE). It includes data collected through action research to investigate how social roles and cooperation practices evolve in circular commons across diverse urban settings.
The research focused on seven case studies: BlueCity (Rotterdam), De Ceuvel (Amsterdam), Diseño Informal (Buenos Aires), Granby Four Streets (Liverpool), Haus der Materialisierung (Berlin), Kibera Public Space Project (Nairobi), and R-Urban (Paris). All data have been anonymized.
The dataset includes:
- Table Collected Data – Transcribed interviews, recordings, and field diaries gathered during the action research process.
- Document Analysis – Coding and analysis of 38 related documents using Atlas.ti.
History
- 2025-04-09 first online, published, posted
Publisher
4TU.ResearchDataFormat
*.Atlas.ti, *.docxAssociated peer-reviewed publication
Title of the associated publication will be linked here as soon as it is available.Organizations
TU Delft, Faculty of Architecture and the Built EnvironmentDATA - restricted access
Reason
Although all data in this dataset have been anonymized (e.g., removal of names and personal identifiers), the case studies involve small, context-specific initiatives where individuals may still be identifiable due to the unique nature of the projects and their limited number of participants. To protect the privacy and confidentiality of the participants, access to the dataset is restricted.
End User Licence Agreement
Access to this dataset may be granted upon request for academic, non-commercial research purposes only. Users must agree to:
- Use the data solely for scholarly research.
- Not attempt to re-identify individuals or initiatives involved in the dataset.
- Not share the dataset with third parties without written consent from the data owner.
- Properly cite the dataset and associated publication in any outputs.
To request access, please contact the corresponding researcher and provide a brief description of the intended use.
Your request will be sent to the owner of the dataset.