On the material and discursive formation of Edinburgh’s fire-safety legislation
Fire.
Discourse on regulatory space.
Literature on capture.
Regulatory capture.
The role of regulation.
Defend public concerns from private enterprise.
Concord and discord.
Architectural plans.
Inclusions, exclusion.
Characteristic spatialities.
Regulations are there to be occupied.
Territorial barriers constantly redrawn.
Contention.
Reciprocities between governmental legislature and physical realities.
Urban form intensifies fire.
Collective responsibility.
Prostitution removes attention from the fire.
Assert risk at a distance.
Technologies of rescue.
Topographies of rescue.
Evacuation in 2.5 minutes.
Nationalisation in war time.
Physical character shaped and re-shaped.
Relations of proximation and distance.
Changing patterns of urbanisations.
Technologies of solidarity.
City as bounded entity.
Apprehension of a risk as a regulation.
Measuring and engineering for fire.
No public voice within the discourse.
Do architects offer a boundary object?
Material satisfaction of a solution.
Safety is a discursive entity.
Changed image of regulation.
Loosening of discursive space equates to tightening of physical space.