Planning and Design for Future Informal Settlements
In the Commons blog, David talks more about his book, Planning and Design for Future Informal Settlements,Shaping the Self-Constructed City, and the process he’s developed called Informal Armatures (IA), a simple working and design approach to foster the emergence of new informal settlements and accompany their sustainable evolution.
UN Habitat University – Lecture Series
The Global Urban Lectures were launched in April 2014 as part of UNI’s mission to support the exchange of ideas between urban professionals, academics…
Can geospatial technology lead to a development ‘data revolution’?
The ability to map data has become essential for urban researchers and city managers worldwide. Geospatial technology, as this tool is known, was in…
Centre for Urban Studies
The Centre for Urban Studies (CUS) is one of 20 designated Research Priority Areas at the University of Amsterdam and forms part of the…
Geographic Information Science & Technology (GIST) Group
The Geographic Information Science and Technology (GIST) Group at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory has been a pioneer in the development, implementation, and application…
Center for Urban & Regional Analysis
CURA is an interdisciplinary group of scholars in social, natural, and environmental sciences; applied economics; agriculture; engineering; health and medical professions; and the humanities…
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy is the leading resource for key issues concerning the use, regulation, and taxation of land. Providing high-quality education…
Mobility Makes States, Migration and Power in Africa
Human mobility has long played a foundational role in producing state territories, resources, and hierarchies. When people move within and across national boundaries, they create both challenges and opportunities. In Mobility Makes States, chapters written by historians, political scientists, sociologists, and anthropologists explore different patterns of mobility in sub-Saharan Africa and how African states have sought to harness these movements toward their own ends. The contributors challenge the image of a fixed and static state that is concerned only with stopping foreign migrants at its border, and show that the politics of mobility takes place across a wide range of locations, including colonial hinterlands, workplaces, camps, foreign countries, and city streets.
Edited by Darshan Vigneswara and Joel Quirk of University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. Log in to see a chapter preview of this book, coming out May 2015 from Penn Press.
Institute of Urban and Demography Studies
The Institute of Urban and Demography Studies at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences is a comprehensive think-tank institute with demography, urban and major regional…
Tracce Urbane
Traces Urban is a network of researchers with different disciplinary backgrounds and from multiple universities, which aims to cross disciplines and to create connections…