Ambivalent Architectures
In: New perspectives on Turkey: NPT, Band 50, S. 189-192
ISSN: 1305-3299
43919 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: New perspectives on Turkey: NPT, Band 50, S. 189-192
ISSN: 1305-3299
In: The Yale review, Band 101, Heft 4, S. 1-29
ISSN: 1467-9736
In: Peace and conflict studies
ISSN: 1082-7307
In the sixties the green and the peace movements alerted the international community of the deterioration of the environment and of the danger of nuclear conflicts. Since then, the green movement has been transformed into political parties, departments, jobs, environmental impact assessments and several international regimes. The first publication of the Club of Rome in 1972, Limits of Growth, had a catalyzing effect for raising life and death questions that confront mankind and claiming that planetary planning was the most important business on earth (Meadows 1972). The peace movement, on the other hand, evolved differently. There were some peak moments such as the peace marches in the eighties, but the impacts were weaker and less decisive. One explanation is that the peace movement had to cope with the strong bureaucracies of foreign offices and of defense departments that claimed the expertise. Another explanation is that a great deal of the peace movement does not define peace as a collective good. Being removed from the embedded conflict gives a false sense of apartness making some conflicts seem irrelevant to societies at peace. The possibility of cruise missiles hitting peaceful countries caused huge peace marches; the snipers in Sarajevo did not. A third reason is that costs of violence continue to be underestimated because of inadequate estimates of the price of failed conflict prevention (Reychler 1999a).
In: The Salisbury review: a quarterly magazine of conservative thought, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 50-51
ISSN: 0265-4881
In: Futures: the journal of policy, planning and futures studies, Band 32, Heft 2, S. 203-204
ISSN: 0016-3287
In: Autres temps: cahiers d'ethique sociale et politique, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 36-40
ISSN: 2261-1010
In: Asian affairs, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 24-33
ISSN: 1477-1500
In: Ashgate studies in architecture
After two decades which saw the construction industry flourish, has come a sudden period of instability, where architecture firms have been jettisoning employees at an unprecedented rate as building projects dry up. This edited volume brings together scholars, critics, and architects to discuss the present state of uncertainty in the practice and discipline of architecture. The chapters are organized into three main areas of inquiry: economics, practice, and technology. Within this larger framework, authors explore issues of security, ecological design, disaster architecture, the future of arc.
Preface Chapter 1: The Long Nineteenth Century: Collecting Primitive Huts and Thinking Through Origins Chapter 2: Architecture and Archaeology Chapter 3: Social Anthropology and the House Societies of Levi-Strauss Chapter 4: Institutions and Community Chapter 5: Consumption Studies and the Home Chapter 6: Embodiment and Architectural Form Chapter 7: Anthropology, Representation and Architecture Chapter 8: Iconoclasm, Decay and the Destruction of Architectural Forms PostscriptBibliographyIndex
In: Comment, School Choice Architecture, 34 Yale Law & Policy Review 187 (2015)
SSRN
In: Architecture's Historical Turn, S. 25-99
In: Strategic change, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 17-28
ISSN: 1099-1697
In: Habitat international: a journal for the study of human settlements, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 167-169
In: Latin American research review, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 280-283
ISSN: 1542-4278