2021 ◽  
pp. 105268462199276
Author(s):  
DeMarcus A. Jenkins

This article builds from scholarship on anti-Blackness in education and spatial imaginaries in geography to theorize an anti-Black spatial imaginary as the prevailing spatial logic that has shaped the configuration and character of American social intuitions, including K-12 schools. As a spatial imaginary, anti-Blackness is circulated through discourses, images, and texts that tell a story of Blackness as a problem, non-human, and placeless. Anchored by the assumption that Black populations are spatially illegitimate, the anti-Black spatial imaginary marks Black bodies as undesirable and therefore extractable from spaces and places that have been envisioned for their exclusion. I consider schools as sites spatialized terror where the exhibitions of terror consist of forcing students to observe other Black bodies being forcibly removed from the classroom and school community; constant rejection of Black language, traditions, music preferences, and other cultural forms of expression; the obliteration of Black names and identities. I offer ways that school leaders can unsettle the anti-Black spatial imaginary to transform schools as sites of holistic healing and possibilities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maike Schwammberger

Abstract As automated driving techniques are increasingly capturing the market, it is particularly important to consider vital functional properties of these systems. We present an overview of an approach that uses an abstract model to logically reason about properties of autonomous manoeuvres at intersections in urban traffic. The approach introduces automotive-controlling timed automata crossing controllers that use the traffic logic UMLSL (Urban Multi-lane Spatial Logic) to reason about traffic situations. Safety in the context of collision freedom is mathematically proven. Liveness (something good finally happens) and fairness (no queue-jumping) are examined and verified using a model-checking tool for timed automata, UPPAAL.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. I. Dolgy ◽  
I. N. Rozenberg ◽  
V. Ya. Tsvetkov

2016 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seth Quintus ◽  
Jeffrey T. Clark
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
pp. 15-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Paolo Russo ◽  
Alan Quaglieri Domínguez
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Jason Herbeck

Set in Martinique, Glissant’s La Lézarde (1958) focuses on the years leading up to the departmentalization of France’s overseas colonies in 1946. In exploring the “spatial logic” (Hitchcock) of Martinican space found in the novel, and the links that characters have with specific parts of this signifying landscape, initial textual analyses demonstrate how these individualized relationships inform each person’s views and actions, and, together, are representative of the competing interests and perspectives involved when attempting to negotiate expressions of French-Caribbean identity. In the context of these conflicting positions articulated by different members of the novel’s young revolutionary group with respect to determining Martinique’s future and chronicling the country’s elusive past, both the conspicuous placement and (in)occupancy of the novel’s principle architectural structure—the Maison de la Source—and La Lézarde’s own (meta)construction serve to illustrate how identity-building in the French Caribbean is fraught with conflict and uncertainty.


Author(s):  
David Beckingham

Having established a political turn in temperance agitation, chapter four examines a prominent group in local Liberal politics: the Popular Control and Licensing Reform Association (PCA). By analysing a series of distinctive maps of public houses produced by the PCA this chapter argues that social reform was rooted in an importantly spatial imagination of problem drinking. The PCA mapped an area of largely Irish north Liverpool, as well as the districts around the Sailors’ Home, St John’s Market and the Town Hall. As such, the group called out a strong connection between the distribution of licensed premises and problems such as prostitution and drunkenness that were associated with alcohol consumption.


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