[UrbanStudiesCircular] 05/13: Special Issue Release | Climate Change & the Future of Cities
Special Issue Release | Climate Change & the Future of Cities Friday, May 13 | 5:00 - 8:00 PM Institute for Public Knowledge 20 Cooper Sq, Fifth Floor New York, NY 10003 More info: https://ipk.nyu.edu/calendar/events/312-public-culture-climate-change-and-ci... Please join the Institute for Public Knowledge for an event to celebrate the release of a special issue of the journal Public Culture, "Climate Change and the Future of Cities: Migration, Adaptation, and Social Change on an Urban Planet<http://publicculture.dukejournals.org/content/28/2_79.toc>." The evening will feature a panel discussion with issue contributors Daniel Aldana Cohen, Nina Berman, Gökçe Günel, Eric Klinenberg, Liz Koslov, and Andy Lakoff, followed by a reception. The special issue of Public Culture includes essays by Eric Klinenberg, Cymene Howe and Dominic Boyer, Andrew Lakoff, Daniel Aldana Cohen, Gökçe Günel, Valeria Procupez, Liz Koslov, Austin Zeiderman, and Jerome Whitington, a photo essay from Colin Jerolmack and Nina Berman, and interviews with experts from Rebuild by Design's international working group, including Henk Ovink, Mindy Fullilove, Edgar Pieterse, Fernando de Mello Franco, and Maarten Hajer. This exciting collection represents the culmination of years of international research and collaboration on the impacts of climate change in cities, and was produced with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation. The entire special issue is available free online<http://publicculture.dukejournals.org/content/28/2_79.toc> for a limited time. Public Culture is a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal of cultural studies, published three times a year for NYU's Institute for Public Knowledge by Duke University Press. In the more than twenty years of its existence, Public Culture has established itself as a prize-winning, field-defining cultural studies journal, seeking a critical understanding of the global flows and cultural forms of the public sphere which define the early twenty-first century. Artists, activists, and both well-established and younger scholars, from across the humanities and social sciences and around the world, present some of their most innovative and exciting work in the pages of the journal.
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urbanstudiescircular@lists.qc.cuny.edu