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CATENA ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 210 ◽  
pp. 105946
Author(s):  
Priscila Bassi Penteado ◽  
Danilo Covaes Nogarotto ◽  
Julia Perilo Baltazar ◽  
Simone Andrea Pozza ◽  
Felippe Benavente Canteras

Author(s):  
Francesco Andreoli ◽  
Arnaud Mertens ◽  
Mauro Mussini ◽  
Vincenzo Prete

Daedalus ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 151 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-21
Author(s):  
Kellie Carter Jackson

Abstract American history is characterized by its exceptional levels of violence. It was founded by colonial occupation and sustained by an economy of enslaved people who were emancipated by a Civil War with casualties rivaling any conflict of nineteenth-century Western Europe. Collective violence continued against African Americans following Reconstruction, and high levels of lethal violence emerged in American cities in the twentieth-century postwar period. What explains America's violent exceptionalism? How has structural violence against African Americans become ingrained in American culture and society? How has it been codified by law, or supported politically? Can we rectify and heal from our violent past?


2021 ◽  
pp. 146879412110634
Author(s):  
Hamed Goharipour ◽  
Huston Gibson

In the era of visual media, cities, and society are represented, experienced, and interpreted through images. The need for interdisciplinary visual approaches, therefore, is indisputable. By focusing on cinema, this paper aims to develop a conceptual, methodological framework through which theory helps a broad range of researchers in social sciences, humanities, and arts interpret the represented phenomenon. Based on Peirce’s model of signs, the framework provides the basis for a dynamic interpretation of the city and society. This paper shows that Peircean cinesemiotics takes advantage of theory in three ways: First, as the basis that provides scholars with clues necessary for identifying eligible “image-signs”; second, as the guiding framework that helps them reach a final interpretation; third, as ideas are being criticized from visual perspectives. As an example of its application, using Jane Jacobs’ “The Death and Life of Great American Cities,” the final part of the paper applies Peircean cinesemiotics to an image-sign from Death Wish (2018) and interprets it as the representation of safety/crime in a neighborhood.


2021 ◽  
pp. 153851322110462
Author(s):  
Natalie B. Vena

In 1916, the Forest Preserve District of Cook County began acquiring land to create a natural retreat for Chicagoans in that booming metropolitan region. Since district officials acquired many properties along county streams, water pollution soon interfered with their mission of creating an urban wilderness for recreational pleasure. To address the problem, in 1931, county leaders appointed the Clean Streams Advisory Committee that collaborated with forest preserve staff members to pressure polluters to clean-up their operations and to persuade enforcement agencies to prosecute ongoing offenders. They also lobbied the Public Works Administration to earmark New Deal funding for sewage treatment in Cook County. Their efforts suggest that early activism against water pollution in American cities emerged not only from efforts to ensure clean drinking water, but also struggles to protect nature. The interwar campaign to clean forest preserve streams anticipated the goals of the federal Clean Water Act (1972) to make all American waterways fishable and swimmable. The movement also preceded the burst of anti-pollution activism that historians have documented in U.S. suburbs after WWII and laid the groundwork for postwar efforts to mitigate water pollution in Cook County.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 377-378
Author(s):  
Claudia Sanford ◽  
Dennis Archambault ◽  
Michele Waktins ◽  
Zach Kilgore ◽  
Michael Appel ◽  
...  

Abstract This presentation explores how a coalition, Senior Housing Preservation-Detroit, considered and planned for “care” in senior buildings in Detroit, Michigan. Detroit was one of the American cities affected in the early days of the pandemic; the coalition pivoted its work in creative, collaborative ways which included understanding the rapidly changing context for those living in low-income senior buildings. Older minority adults have been shown to be disproportionally affected by COVID-19; the coalition successfully advocated for testing to be brought to senior buildings (and now vaccine distribution) and addressed mask distribution and food insecurity in several senior buildings (see Archambault, Sanford and Perry, 2020). Without the long-established partnerships, “care” could not have been as coordinated, multi-sector and trusted. The presentation will discuss lessons learned that can be applied to future challenges in supporting the well-being of residents as they negotiate their residential spaces.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (44) ◽  
pp. 98-111
Author(s):  
Florencia Retamal-Quijada ◽  
Javiera Pavez-Estrada

Since its inception in ancient Greece, public space has played a key role in the politics and democracy of cities. Its role has been degraded in post-modernity, and reached its deepest crisis in the full maturity of the post-Fordist system (from 1990 onwards). This economic and representation depression, as well as institutional legitimacy, that States are experiencing, have promoted the emergence and resurgence of different social movements that flood cities globally. Here is where the concern of the Frente Urbano Amparo Poch y Gascón collective lies, formed by the authors, to recognize and characterize, from a socio-urban logic, these manifestations and the sustained occupation that public spaces have experienced in different Latin American cities during the last decade. This research, framed within the Virtual Latin American Meeting, Utopías Líquidas, is proposed starting from a mixed methodology of collective mapping, recognizing public spaces, and characterizing their occupation exercised by Latin American social movements, in the dispute to redefine them and regain their political character, and thus value the different Latin American social movements and their struggles, in an act that encourages resistance and solidarity.


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