Insurgent Urbanisms are often portrayed as spontaneous, grassroots responses to the inequities embedded in urban policies and-operating entirely outside state structures. But are they truly autonomous? In Insurgent Urbanisms in the Americas, Kristine Stiphany and Edna Ely-Ledesma offer a new perspective on how struggles for more inclusive and equitable cities take shape-and how they transform the very institutions and spaces they confront.
From Brazil's favelas to Ecuador's suburbios, and Puerto Rico's hurricane-battered shores to the gentrified centers of U.S. cities, marginalized communities have long challenged dominant models of urban development. Over time, these struggles have not only resisted the status quo but have become new modes of urbanism and sites of planning. Stiphany and Ely-Ledesma show how insurgencies connect across places while remaining deeply context-specific-tracing their origins in housing movements, their evolution through co-produced knowledge, and their reinvention in response to climate crisis. Through powerful field research and firsthand activism, contributors reveal how insurgencies not only resist but actively reshape urban orders, built environments, and public landscapes-issuing a compelling call to make urbanism matter.
This volume is essential reading for students, educators, and practitioners of design and urban planning, Latin American and Latinx studies, and spatial justice-anyone seeking to understand how insurgency becomes a method for transforming cities.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Postgraduate, Professional Practice & Development, and Undergraduate Advanced
Illustrationen
106 s/w Abbildungen, 104 s/w Photographien bzw. Rasterbilder, 2 s/w Zeichnungen, 2 s/w Tabellen
2 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 104 Halftones, black and white; 106 Illustrations, black and white
Maße
Höhe: 246 mm
Breite: 174 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-032-55382-5 (9781032553825)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Kristine Stiphany is an Assistant Professor of Architecture at the University at Buffalo and the Director of the Design for Resilient Environments Lab. Her work examines how the aftereffects of urban redevelopment have created new architectures, landscapes, and building cultures, with a particular focus on Latin America and the U.S.-Mexico border.
Edna Ely-Ledesma is an Associate Professor in the Department of Planning and Landscape Architecture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Director of the Kaufman Lab for the Study and Design of Food Systems and Marketplaces. Her research, teaching, and mentoring focuses on understanding the development of the smart, green, and just 21st century city.
Foreword; Preface; Introduction; 1. Insurgent Urbanisms; Part 1. Origins: Insurgency and Urban Housing; 2. Between Local Initiatives and Policy Responses: The Chilean Experience of Rental Housing; 3. Between Minimum Space and Maximum Profitability: New Forms of Residential Precarity in Rental Housing in Chile; 4. From Utopia to Vernacular: Social Housing, Informality, and Right to the City in Guayaquil, Ecuador; 5. Housing Struggles and Organizing in the Wake of Financialization in Mexico; 6. Educational Insurgency in Sao Paulo, Brazil; 7. A Brief Genealogy of Peripheral Insurgencies in Sao Paulo, Brazil; Part 2. Iterations: Insurgency and Knowledge Co-Construction; 8. Faith-Based Organizations: A Pathway to Insurgent Planning in Seattle?; 9. Community Counter-Mapping for Urban Upgrading in Fortaleza, Brazil; 10. Attempts at Homogenization, Hybridization, and Contestation at the Mexico/United States Borderlands; 11. "Socially Charged Possibilities": Are Political-Spatial Formulations in Sao Paulo Reflective of a Right to the City?; 12. Affordable but Unhealthy: A Partial Right to the City in South Texas Informal Subdivisions; Part 3. Evolutions: Insurgency and Environmental Justice; 13. From Environmental Criminalization to Insurgent Environmental Justice: Occupying and Holding Ground in Sao Paulo's Southern Periphery; 14. Balancing Access and Regenerating Habitats: Towards a Socio-Ecological Integration in the Rio Grande/Rio Bravo Delta; 15. Designing a New City Place: Green Infrastructure on the U.S.-Mexico Border; 16. From Infrastructure to Environmental Justice: The Case of a Multiracial Unincorporated Community in North Texas; 17. Resisting Colonialismo Ambiental and Colonialismo Desastre: The Case of Casa Pueblo in Puerto Rico; 18. Reframing Waller Creek: Landscape as an Agent of Urban Change; Conclusion: Learning from Insurgent Urbanisms; 19. Conclusion: American Urbanism after a Right to the City