Invisible Civility: Towards an Unsettling Reckoning
From its inception, Landscape Architecture has been concerned with the imperative to civilize territories already under cultivation and in deeply enfolded functional relationships with indigenous peoples of Turtle Island. Translocating European ideals of form, function, aesthetics, and organization to America, the pioneers of planning and landscape architecture felt the moral imperative to shape a new nation in their image. Our founding father, Frederick Law Olmsted, is hailed as a humanitarian, an abolitionist, and a pillar of democratic vision for the built environment. As his bicentennial unfolds this year, the moment is ripe for retrospection, a thorough accounting, and a sobering investigation into the formation of our profession.
Utu in the Anthropocene
Places Journal
How are colonial landscapes to be redesigned? To answer this question, begin with the Māori concept of reciprocity, the foundation for the valuation of all beings, human and non-human.
Designing Indian Country
Places Journal
Suppose Native America is not over, that there is no “after colonialism.” How do we create public spaces that enable true contact between cultures?
A Third University is Possible
Book published online
