CfP for Journal of Urbanism THE FUTURE OF SINGLE-FAMILY DETACHED HOUSING; Deadline: 1 June 2012

THE FUTURE OF SINGLE-FAMILY DETACHED HOUSING

Journal of Urbanism
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/rjou

Deadline: 1 June, 2012

What is the role of single-family detached housing in sustainable cities?
Many are now predicting that single-family housing, especially at the
periphery of major cities, is destined to become the future slum. But
should we give up on single-family housing as a viable urban form? Given
its popularity and sheer ubiquity, shouldn’t single-family detached housing
find its place in the future course of sustainable urbanism? Under what
conditions might the single-family detached house be an important part of
the sustainable city? The dichotomy between the idealization and the
disrepute of single-family housing demonstrates the need to clarify its
role in the contemporary metropolitan city.

This special issue will move the discussion beyond debates over the
non-sustainability of single-family detached housing toward a focus on
innovative solutions. We view the non-sustainability of vast expanses of
single-use, single-family detached housing as a settled question: such
areas are highly problematic. The more pertinent question is what can be
done to improve the sustainability of this urban form? What are the pros
and cons of alternative solutions?

Continue reading “CfP for Journal of Urbanism THE FUTURE OF SINGLE-FAMILY DETACHED HOUSING; Deadline: 1 June 2012”

CfP: Rethinking Urban Inclusion: Spaces, Mobilisations, Interventions Coimbra Portugal 28.-30.06.12, Deadline: 04.02.12

Call for Papers
(submission deadline 4 February 2012)
Rethinking Urban Inclusion: Spaces, Mobilisations, Interventions
to be held in Coimbra, Portugal, 28-30 June 2012
Conference held under the initiative “Cities Are Us

With almost half the world’s population living in cities, questioning the urban dimension of social inclusion and exclusion is imperative. Urban inclusion is increasingly influenced – and often constrained – by intertwined processes of economic globalization, state re-articulation, polarization and diversification of (local) populations and the political practices they add to the city. Educational, health and environmental inequalities, segregation, unemployment, lack of political participation, discrimination and the inability to deal with different forms of participation are all phenomena of exclusion with a local dimension but a multi-scalar nature. At the same time, acting towards social inclusion is developed around ideas, knowledge(s), experiences, resources and capacities which are (dis)located across an array of arenas and distributed among different actors. While traditional concepts and practices of urban inclusion centered on institutions and top-down decision-making seem inadequate to tackle this complexity, new ones are often in their infancy and may be in tension with more established policies. Contesting the centrality of the state and market pervasiveness, a new variety of counter-hegemonic positions and projects, and alternative visions of urban democracy and justice that inform bottom-up and participatory approaches to urban inclusion, have become popular in the Global South, while their transposition to cities in the Global North have met resistance or hardly gone beyond theorization.

The Conference aims to understand and ultimately rethink social inclusion at the urban scale, as the product of broader dynamics and the interaction of different actors and languages. How can we trace, define, and challenge the new subtle forms of social and territorial exclusion, trying to reinvent urban inclusion as a meeting space between local governance efforts and bottom-up initiatives? Is it possible to think a novel approach to understanding these changing cities, using as a “lever” images of “the power of powerlessness” and the struggles against/within established systems?
Within this perspective, the conference welcomes contributions balancing description, explanation, and prescription, with the aim to contribute to an “ecology of knowledges” which could give visibility to new forms of collective action and community experimentation in reshaping cities in different contexts, in order to set the preconditions for a more solid horizon of social and territorial justice at both urban and extra-urban scales.

We invite participants to rethink urban inclusion along three intertwined axes:
Space. Social inclusion/exclusion gets inscribed and becomes visible in the organization of space. Consequently, urban planning policies influence policies of inclusion and social justice in important ways. In the past few decades, spatial exclusion has become more and more evident in the case of environmental (in)justice, that is, the production and unequal distribution of environmental costs, such as waste disposal or industrial pollution, along lines of social/spatial differentiation. Urban policies of garbage disposal have become a threat to sub-urban and rural areas, both in the city’s hinterland and in its far away “periphery”, through legal and illegal waste trade circuits. The increasing privatization of public goods, such as water or open space, is also an important cause of spatial injustice and exclusion in the city. Marginal urban and peri-urban communities in different contexts, North and South, have been struggling, sometimes successfully, to defend their
access to clean air, water and soil as well as their right to have a voice in decisions on how urban space should be used. Social practices such as urban farming or squatting have been recognized as crucial expressions of such movements towards the re-appropriation of urban space as a “free” resource for community livelihood and resilience. Local governments are constantly challenged to grant spatial inclusion and justice. Nevertheless, different definitions of “inclusion” and “justice”, as well as different planning scales (i.e. urban vs. regional), may challenge and ultimately invalidate policies of spatial justice. How to make sense of and challenge such contradictions in a time in which local and global processes constantly re-produce each other and blend up in the transformation of urban space? How can we re-define spatial inclusion policies, and the concepts that inform them, in more comprehensive ways that are able to articulate at different scales of the
planning process? How can we help rethink the “urban” experience as it relates to spatial and environmental (in)justice?
Mobilizations. Individuals and groups that experience exclusion are increasingly also actors of inclusion. Social action redefines the public significance and scope of squares, streets and parks. Social movements expose the interdependencies between the global and the local, suggesting new approaches to urban inclusion that assume and expose the larger processes that generate exclusion. Identity politics has also been a major source of innovation of urban inclusion: communities of women, LGBT people, migrants, ethnic and religious identities have operated as spaces of inclusion and socialization for their members, so rendering ideas of inclusion more sensitive to difference, discrimination and recognition. The young generations are designing new and often informal ways to make their voices heard in the virtual world, which often translate into new practices and uses of the city. All these new forms of mobilization aim to overcome the shortcomings of established forms of public “participation”, which may paradoxically strengthen the social capital of those who are more likely to participate into civil society organizations. However, social mobilization may fail to respond to larger needs for inclusion and urban justice, especially when it stems from very particular and localized needs and claims. The questions here are: Why and how do social actors translate urban issues into issues of social inclusion? What actions do social actors take beyond the existing spectrum of possibilities? What value do these actions add to urban inclusion? And, equally importantly: What actions have been made invisible by the dominant academic paradigms? Could the emerging pre-planning strength of the new insurgent citizenships converge onto a shared horizon and represent a critical mass for re-conceiving and reestablishing the ways of participation in governing cities?
Interventions. The first two issues help to frame the last question that we want to explore: the current nature, scope and effectiveness of public interventions. Governments at all levels have played and will arguably continue to play a major part in promoting social inclusion in its urban dimension. In the neo-liberal era, the notion of a light regulatory state is suppressing that of an interventionist authority, which is causing disinvestment in redistributive welfare and a “cheap” commitment to formal equality. Local governments have been, at different times, both allies and opponents of the state in this process, depending on the different issues at stake. In several regions of the world, bigger cities have put in place local welfare that complements and sometimes replaces state interventions. In many instances, they have been creative and open to collaboration with civil society, whose expertise and knowledge on issues of exclusion/inclusion is openly acknowledged. At the same time, the contextual nature and limited impact of local interventions emerges, as well as the gap between the mobilization and institutionalization of new ideas of inclusion. More generally, as local politics are occupied by a variety of actors and often conflicting interests, the overall will and capacity of local governments to promote inclusion as opposed to competing agendas of development and security should not be taken for granted but questioned in the analysis of inclusion policies. How can public policy promote urban inclusion in the current era? What kinds of “glocal” interdependencies emerge from the analysis of state/local policy targeting (urban) inclusion? How can these interdependencies be addressed and effectively tackled? What obstacles does action for urban inclusion meet inside and outside the (local) government?

We seek contributions that develop along one of the above thematic axes, coming from different disciplinary perspectives, both from the academic community and the social activism domain. Paper proposals should be received by 4 February 2012 and consist of: title, abstract (200 words maximum) and brief biography of author(s) (150 words). You will be notified about acceptance by 29 February 2012.

Please submit your proposal online at: http://www.ces.uc.pt/eventos/citiesareus/pages/pt/call-for-papers_.php
Following the conference, authors will revise the papers presented to take into account public discussion at the conference. All revised papers resubmitted by 30 July 2012 will be included in an Electronic Proceedings Book to be published on-line with an ISBN in September 2012. Among the papers presented (and received for the e-publication), 20 will be selected by the Scientific Committee to be published in a printed book, which will also include the papers of the keynote speakers and the conclusion of the project “Library of Interesting Policies of Social Inclusion”, coordinated by CES and CISDP/UCLG

CfP: Emerging Boundaries of Praxis – 9th AHRA Research Student Conference 19.-20.05.12 Aberdeen

Emerging Boundaries of Praxis
9th AHRA Research Student Conference. 19-20 May 2012. Aberdeen
Scott Sutherland School of Architecture, Robert Gordon University
With IDEAS Research Institute; Environment for People

Call for papers
New Urban Conditions are transforming the way we perceive urban issues and recognize new research strands. Shifting socio-economic and political conditions and the urban production and consumption patterns stipulate new-fangled ideologies in the production of Built Environment (architecture; landscape; public realm; planning schemes and so on) and hence the methods and ideologies that engross in producing these built environments warrant a renewed thinking process. Urban managers (architects and allied professionals) largely require renaissance in thinking process for preparing themselves to countenance the improbability of the new and emerging urban conditions.
9th AHRA Conference is expected to give delegates (architects, planners, urban designers, construction sector professionals, and all allied professionals), especially the research students, a platform to share and understand the emerging fundamentals of research methods; urban issues and findings; and overall a conduit for student delegates to establish collaborations and stir polemical debates in order to allow them to re-position themselves to look at the cities and architecture differently.
Papers are sought from the researchers in the field of built environment, which deals with any issues on focusing on built environment. Selected peer reviewed papers (post-conference), will be published in a special issue of Global Built Environment Review (http://www.edgehill.ac.uk/gber/). Delegates receive “Continuing Professional Development” (CPD) certification for attendance.

Proposal for papers should be sent as 200 words abstract with title, name, affiliation and keywords to AHRA9@rgu.ac.uk by 31 January 2012.
Call for Papers: 31 January 2012
Acceptance of Papers: 17 February, 2012
Full Papers: 20 April, 2012
Conference: 19 May, Saturday, 2012.

STUDY PROGRAM: Urban Studies MSc at University College London

http://www.ucl.ac.uk/urbanstudies

Cities are now a critical focus for research, policy-making and public debate. More than half the global population now lives in cities and according to the United Nations this number is set to rise to three-quarters by the year 2050. The scale and complexity of these developments necessitate the development of innovative and interdisciplinary modes of analysis that can address critical challenges and influence debates both within and outside the academy.
The Urban Studies MSc at UCL gives students the opportunity to better understand these debates and to apply this knowledge in the course of their career – whether this is geared towards further research and writing or through an enriched practical and professional contribution to the urban arena.
The MSc draws on teaching and research from across four UCL faculties (Arts and Humanities; the Bartlett School of the Built Environment; Engineering Sciences; and Social and Historical Sciences). Students take three core modules in “Urban imaginations”, “Cities, space and power” and “Urban practices” then choose further courses from over forty optional modules. These range from research methods training to specialist modules such as “Community participation in city strategies”, “Creative cities”, “Comparative urbanism”, “London”, “Public space and the city”, “Asian cities” and “Post-colonial theory and the multicultural city.”
Entry requirements are the equivalent of a first or upper-second class degree. Full time, part time and flexible study options are available.

For further details please visit the course website: www.ucl.ac.uk/urbanstudies
Academic enquiries to Andrew Harris: andrew.harris@ucl.ac.uk
Admissions enquiries to Fiona Mannion: f.mannion@ucl.ac.uk

SEMINAR: Dialogues in Development: African perspectives on urban development planning, 21.2.12, London

Dialogues in Development: African perspectives on urban development planning.
A three part seminar series run by the Development Planning Unit, UCL.
In the next decade two-thirds of Africa’s population growth will be urban. Although Africa has the lowest proportion of continental urbanization, with about 38% of its population living in urban areas, after Asia, it is “expected to have the largest urban population growth of any region, with about 200 million urban dwellers.” (McGranahan et al, 2009). In this unique series of three dialogues, Susan Parnell addresses ways of understanding the enormous changes to cities occurring in sub-saharan African countries. Elaborating on the theoretical and ethical challenges posed by unprecedented urbanisms in Africa, and working at the interface of theory and practice in the global South, she reflects on how equipped we are to face the urban planning futures.
Part 3. Urban planning futures in dialogue. A panel discussion.
The final seminar will be a panel discussion addressing issues in African urban research and management that emerge from the previous two seminars.
Date: 21 Feb 17h30-19h00 Venue: 118 Chandler House, 2 Wakefield Street, London, WC1N 1PF
Prof Susan Parnell is visiting Leverhulme Professor at UCL. She is Professor of Geography at the University of Cape Town. She has published extensively and sits on the board of many urban studies journals. She holds many professional and advisory appointments and works at the interface of theory and practice. She is a founder member of the African Centre for Cities, UCT.

SEMINAR: Constructs of place: what makes cities tick? 20.02.12. London

Constructs of place: what makes cities tick?
What shapes a city’s identity? Who defines it? Is New York about individualism or community? Is Jerusalem about religion, conflict or cafés? This session looks at cities as diverse as these, plus Hong Kong, Berlin and Tel Aviv & at their DNA, and how it changes through migration, politics and globalisation. Rich evidence and critical thinking on city identities and urban evolution
Centred on The Spirit of Cities: Why the Identity of a City Matters in a Global Age (reported in 22 January Observer piece on mega-cities), plus excellent research on Tel Aviv, its ideological foundations and layering on top of existing development.
Monday 20 February, 8.30pm, Kings Place, York Way, London N1 9AG
Book online

CONFERENCE: Second London Citizen Cyberscience Summit, 16.-18.02.12 London

On your marks!
The London Citizen Cyberscience Summit in 2010 brought together for the first time volunteers and scientists from a wide range of Web-based science projects, ranging from volunteer computing (SETI@home, ClimatePrediction.net) to volunteer thinking (GalaxyZoo, Herbaria@home) to volunteer sensing (EpiCollect, NoiseTube) and much more. Historians, journalists, teachers and businessmen all brought their angle on citizen cyberscience to the event. Above all, it was a chance for the some of the millions of volunteers who make citizen cyberscience so successful to tell their story.
Get set!
The Second London Citizen Cyberscience Summit, 16-18 February 2012, promises to be just as pioneering in its scope, and even more innovative in its format – ranging from classical academic seminar on the first day, through to full-fledged open hardware hackfest on the last. It will take place at the Royal Geographical society (on the 16th) and at UCL (17th and 18th), in London.
Go!
On Day 1, we set the scene. (Thursday 16th February 2012, Royal Geographical Society). Meet some of the leading figures in citizen science and explore the process of public engagement and participation, outreach of citizen science to the developing world, and the undertaking of “extreme” citizen science projects, in rain forests, arctic tundra, or urban jungles.
On Day 2, we look beneath the surface. (Friday 17th February 2012, UCL). Experts will discuss the hardware and software that powers citizen cyberscience. There will be a panel discussion with citizen scientists on why participation and engagement, and a showcase of new and future citizen science projects. In the evening, we’ll start planning the next day’s hands-on sessions.
On Day 3, we get down to business – together! (Saturday 18th February 2012) This will include further unconference sessions, and a hackfest for development of hardware and software prototypes, demos and mock-ups, with awards for the most innovative creations!
Propose talks and demos here http://bit.ly/loncitscisumform
Register and buy your ticket here http://lccs2.eventbrite.com/

Urban Migration Film Festival 15. Feb. 2012, UCL

Urban Migration Film Festival February 15th 09:30-17:00
Readers of this list may wish to sign up for the free UCL Urban Migration Film Festival, which will take place on Wednesday 15th February 09:30-17:00. We will explore questions regarding urban migration today through the prism of clips from seminal films of the past century. You are invited to come for the day, bring a packed lunch and see the two films screened over lunchtime, or drop in to the morning or afternoon sessions. Whichever you choose, you are guaranteed a fascinating discussion with a panel of experts from architecture, anthropology, film studies, planning, psychiatry and art who will be joined by several of the film-makers.
The panels will consider Journeys – how do migrants negotiate their environment whilst on the move? Transition – how do migrants adapt to new systems, shape their communities and create temporary environments? The festival will end with a session on Negotiation and Accommodation: with films on establishing roots, acculturation and myths of return.
Sign up for a free ticket on Eventbrite

Download the brochure and timetable here

Follow the Urban Migration Films blog

CONFERENCE: Nationalism and the City 10.-11.02.12, University of Cambridge

Nationalism and the City
Friday 10 February – Saturday 11 February 2012
Location: CRASSH, 7 West Road, University of Cambridge
This conference is about the possibilities and interdictions of cities, the formation of political horizons, and the dynamics of identity. The object is to address an intersection: to consider histories and trajectories of nationalism as they interact with those of urban space and place. Specifically, the conference will explore the possibility of employing spatiality as an interpretive lens to disrupt existing theories of nations and nationalism: how might we re-consider the ‘imagined community’ by locating it within what urbanists describe as the city’s ‘real-and-imagined’ space? How are political vocabularies like nationalism equipped or subverted by urban environments? In which ways might the city affect, reflect or destabilize discourses of national identity? The event will facilitate discussion on these and other questions, navigating the urban palimpsest with voices from a variety of academic disciplines and professional backgrounds to enliven debates on space, politics and identity.
For full details of the programme and online registration please visit http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/1684/
Conference supported by the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk) and the Faculty of History (http://www.hist.cam.ac.uk) both at the University of Cambridge, as well as the Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism (http://www.lse.ac.uk/asen). Conference Convener: Christopher Moffat (History, University of Cambridge)

SYMPOSIUM: Informal City: Design as Political Engagement Architectural Association Symposium, 09. February 2012, London

The AA has been very central to the evolution of ideas about the informal city and the formulation of strategies to deal with it. The AA Research Cluster on Urbanism and the Informal City seeks to give continuity to that work while focusing more specifically on architecture and urbanism as tools of political engagement in the transformation of the informal city and the social conditions associated with it. This year the Research Cluster hosted a series of events that have investigated the role of design as a generative tool in reconceptualising the challenges and potential of informality. You are invited to a symposium that concludes this work, on the 9th of February (10am-6pm) at the Architectural Association, 36 Bedford Square, WC1B 3ES. The title of the symposium is Informal City: Design as Political Engagement. The symposium will bring together internationally acclaimed practitioners working directly with conditions of informality in a one day event of discussion and debate structured around two key themes: design as research and design as strategy. This is a public event so please circulate to others who might also be interested.