A

AIA CES Credits

AV Office

Abstract Publication

Academic Affairs

Academic Calendar, Columbia University

Academic Calendar, GSAPP

Admissions Office

Advanced Standing Waiver Form

Alumni Board

Alumni Office

Architecture Studio Lottery

Assistantships

Avery Library

Avery Review

Avery Shorts

S

STEM Designation

Satisfactory Academic Progress

Scholarships

Skill Trails

Student Affairs

Student Awards

Student Conduct

Student Council (All Programs)

Student Financial Services

Student Health Services at Columbia

Student Organization Handbook

Student Organizations

Student Services Center

Student Services Online (SSOL)

Student Work Online

Studio Culture Policy

Studio Procedures

Summer Workshops

Support GSAPP

Close
This website uses cookies as well as similar tools and technologies to understand visitors' experiences. By continuing to use this website, you consent to Columbia University's usage of cookies and similar technologies, in accordance with the Columbia University Website Cookie Notice Group 6

Faranak Miraftab

Tue, Oct 28    1:15pm

End of Empire, Planning Education, and Promise of Humane Urbanism
Recognizing the darkness of this historical moment and corporatized universities, I stress the potential for imagining and building a new world, a new pedagogy, a new planning. Building on prior research and reflection on my collaborative work, I make a case for a relational approach in teaching and research to overcome the dominant “American exceptionalism” and forknowledge co-production to move beyond the walls of academia. Learning from the insurgent work of the grassroots with women at their center, may guide us to anticolonial planning that is not centered on profit but on life—a humane urbanism.

Faranak Miraftab is Professor of Urban and Regional Planning with joint appointments in Women and Gender Studies and Geography at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her established transnational feminist urban scholarship focuses on urbanization, citizenship, and insurgent practices of marginalized people based on class, race, and gender in many areas of the world—United States, Middle East, Southern Africa, and Latin America. Her most recent book, Global Heartland: Displaced Labor, Transnational Lives, and Local Placemaking, received the American Sociological Association’s Global & Transnational Sociology Award and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning’s Davidoff book award, and it was a C. Wright Mills book award finalist by the Society for the Study of Social Problems. Miraftab is currently working on a collaborative project on co-production of knowledge by academics and urban movements, on grassroots practices of radical care and how they produce hope and build alternative humane urbanisms as alternatives to the dominant profit-centered bully urbanism.