A curation of articles, essays, book reviews and interviews on critical geographical concerns.
Considers the spatial form and social processes of cities and urbanization with particular attention to the geographies and politics of building theories of the urban.
Now, in the post- Cold War era, East and Central European cities are not so much carriers of specific developments, trends or classes, but can be considered showcases or laboratories for post-socialist transformation at large. In "Chasing Warsaw" Monika Grubbauer and Joanna Kusiak try to chase one of these cities and its transformations.
"Insurgent Public Space" is an anthology of unauthorized appropriations of city spaces, temporary events and guerrilla actions that resist commercial infestation and social exclusion.The volume was conceived in 2007 at the Sixth Conference of the Pacific Rim Community Design Network, a loosely connected group of community-based activists and scholars who meet approximately every two years to discuss grassroots planning and design.
In "Learning the City" Colin McFarlane retells a story about the political strategies employed by activists involved in the Mumbai Slum Dwellers Federation (MDSF). Jockin Arputham, the founder of MDSF, narrates how the organization discovered that they could use the public phone for free by “inserting a railway ticket into the receiver”. Such technical savvy was not, however, just a strategy used to keep the organization’s phone bill down.
Alpa Shah has written a brilliant ethnography of life in the small village of Tapu in northeast India, and the potential contribution of her book extends far beyond debates on indigenous life in the subcontinent. "In the Shadows of the State" is an excellent analysis that cuts across several themes: the operation of tribal political orders, the dangers of some strands of indigenous rights and environmental activism, and the transformations of state practices as they are reproduced through class hierarchies and sometimes violent networks.
This article is an attempt at reading the city through what gets extended and/or suspended in it in a time of an interruption, or a glitch. It does this while thinking about Cairo's curfew during the summer of 2020.
Turning to the case of Newark, NJ, this article shows how teachers have embraced a strategy not of bypassing or abolishing the institutions most hollowed out by neoliberal market rule but of taking these institutions over and imagining them anew.
In this article, I describe Mumbai’s sea as an “anthroposea” – a sea made with ongoing anthropogenic processes across landwaters – to draw attention to the ways in which it troubles both urban planning and the making of environmental futures.
Has modernism evolved from a means to create a utopian future to an architectural discontent co-opted for racist purposes? The planners who built mid-20th century Scandinavian, modernist suburbs conceived of them as places of innovation, possibility, and visionary thinking.
Homing in on the protracted landscape of construction, I am concerned with how urban experts in Taksim 360, who do not entirely concur with the seemingly determined trajectory of urban transformation in Tarlabaşı, put inevitability to work. I ask: what makes urban experts stay with a project that might not materialize?