Neighborhood Narratives - 0 views
Mapping Marginality by Denis Wood - Guernica / A Magazine of Art & Politics - 0 views
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Also, a lot of [cartographers] don’t want to acknowledge any complicity with the way things are, and maps have a huge deal to do with the way things are. They want to pretend their hands are clean: maps are just a tool. But you can do bad things with a tool and you can go good things with a tool. I’ve been suggesting to the hardest-edged people of all that they could put their epistemological and ontological arguments on a really firm foundation by simply acknowledging the fact that they are making the world. And they recoil from that, viscerally and instinctively, as they continue to make the software that enables them to make the world. In explicit terms, some of the most brilliant analyses of how maps do what they do have been carried out by these people who are basically building machines to make maps. When someone drops a bomb on something and kills a bunch of kids, and they do that using a map that you made, you either accept the responsibility for it—a kind of well, you can’t make an omelet without breaking some eggs responsibility—or you say, “Damn it, I can’t do this anymore.”
Aesthetic Events in Occupation | by Elyse Mallouk | Art Practical - 0 views
NIMBY and housing crisis in Sydney - 1 views
Urban Planning - Forum Sydney - 1 views
In the favelas on the frontline of protest, Brazilians ask: who is this World Cup for? - 1 views
Dignity Barricade | Beto Shwafaty - 0 views
Mapping Emergence | Drawing Research Network - 1 views
Domes for the World - 1 views
Fixing politics: the housing affordability crisis | Crikey - 0 views
Intervention - The Right against the city | AntipodeFoundation.org - 0 views
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Claiming a RttC has not merely been a “way to respond to neoliberal urbanism” (Purcell 2002: 99) but a way to escape an apparent inability to influence agendas on the national or international scale; think, here, of the largely reactionary climate in the US under Reagan and UK under Thatcher in the 1980s. Claiming the RttC was to claim asylum away from neoliberal national agendas of the time; an exodus that came as a necessity. Or even think of the later claim of RttC as pacification: “a ‘new urbanism’ movement that touts the sale of community and boutique lifestyles to fulfil urban dreams” (Harvey 2009: 323).
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By now there is a fact: (neo)Nazis and the ultra-conservative, authoritarian and neoliberal governments following the dictate of the EU, IMF and ECB in Greece have both chosen a scale of intervention that was, until recently, almost monopolised by voices of the social antagonist movement and critical Left: the urban scale.
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A second option — essentially, the only one viable— would be for us to use this unprecedented attack as an opportunity, an opportunity to define solidly what in this particular scale of intervention (the urban) is politically alluring and fertile for the broader movement of social and human emancipation.
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6 star dreams and industrial wasted-land | Urban Design Blog on WordPress.com - 0 views
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The concepts of 'central business districts' and 'industrial' 'employment areas' should be questioned for two reasons. The possible effects of the NBN and ICT more broadly on spatial decision-making has generally been overlooked. Secondly, the exclusion of residential from these CBD areas, and commercial and residential from centrally located 'industrial areas' can be seen as...
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