|
|
ix | |
|
|
xiii | |
Notes on Contributors |
|
xvi | |
Foreword |
|
xxvi | |
|
Acknowledgements |
|
xxix | |
Preface: Monumentally and Insurgency |
|
xxx | |
|
Introduction: Architecture and Social Engagement |
|
xxxiii | |
|
Postscript: How and When Was Architecture Socially Engaged? |
|
xxxviii | |
|
|
PART I Engagement as Discourse |
|
|
1 | (46) |
|
1 What If... or Toward a Progressive Understanding of Socially Engaged Architecture |
|
|
3 | (11) |
|
|
2 Understanding Social Engagement in Architecture: Toward Situated-Embodied and Critical Accounts |
|
|
14 | (13) |
|
|
3 Toward an Architecture of the Public Good |
|
|
27 | (10) |
|
|
4 Radical Democracy and Spatial Practices |
|
|
37 | (10) |
|
|
PART II Targets of Engagement |
|
|
47 | (68) |
|
5 Retracing the Emergence of a Human Settlements Approach: Designing in, From and With Contexts of Development |
|
|
49 | (15) |
|
|
6 The United Nations and Self-Help Housing in the Tropics |
|
|
64 | (7) |
|
|
7 Tracing the History of Socially Engaged Architecture: School Building as Development Aid in Postcolonial Sub-Saharan Africa |
|
|
71 | (16) |
|
|
8 The Opera Village Africa: Christoph Schlingensief and His Social Sculpture |
|
|
87 | (15) |
|
|
9 Seeking Appropriate Methods: The Role of Public-Interest Design Advocacy in the High Himalaya |
|
|
102 | (13) |
|
|
PART III Structures of Engagement |
|
|
115 | (52) |
|
10 Reconceiving Professionalism in the Twenty-First Century |
|
|
117 | (9) |
|
|
11 The Aga Khan Award for Architecture and Social Engagement via the Built Environment |
|
|
126 | (17) |
|
|
|
12 Sale Ends Soon: Epistemological Alternatives to Flying Architects |
|
|
143 | (12) |
|
|
13 Creating the Environment for Social Engagement: The Experience of Venezuela |
|
|
155 | (12) |
|
|
PART IV Subjects of Engagement |
|
|
167 | (64) |
|
14 Housing for Spatial Justice: Building Alliances Between Women Architects and Users |
|
|
169 | (17) |
|
|
15 Children's Engagement in Design: Reflections From Research and Practice |
|
|
186 | (15) |
|
|
16 The Garden of Liberation: Emptiness and Engagement at Suan Mokkh, Chaiya |
|
|
201 | (14) |
|
|
17 The Darker Side of Social Engagement |
|
|
215 | (16) |
|
|
Part V Tectonics of Engagement |
|
|
231 | (38) |
|
18 A Comparative History of Live Projects Within the United States and the UK: Key Characteristics and Contemporary Implications |
|
|
233 | (10) |
|
|
19 The Do-It-Your(Self): The Construction of Social Identity Through DIY Architecture and Urbanism |
|
|
243 | (14) |
|
|
20 Building the Unseen: A Shift to a Socially Engaged Architecture Education |
|
|
257 | (12) |
|
|
Part VI Environmental Engagement |
|
|
269 | (54) |
|
21 Umdenken Umschwenken: Environmental Engagement and Swiss Architecture |
|
|
271 | (18) |
|
|
22 Material Participation and the Architecture of Domestic Autonomy |
|
|
289 | (17) |
|
|
23 Salvage Salvation: Counterculture Trash as a Cultural Resource |
|
|
306 | (17) |
|
|
PART VII Mapping Engagement |
|
|
323 | (74) |
|
24 Marginality, Urban Conflict and the Pursuit of Social Engagement in Latin American Cities |
|
|
325 | (12) |
|
|
25 Understanding Public Interest Design: A Conceptual Taxonomy |
|
|
337 | (13) |
|
|
26 Architecture Before 3.11: Unspoken Social Architecture During the Blank 25 Years of Japan |
|
|
350 | (16) |
|
|
27 The Reciprocity Between Architects and Social Change: Taiwan Experience After the 1990s |
|
|
366 | (14) |
|
|
28 Transforming the Spatial Legacies of Colonialism and Apartheid: Participatory Practice and Design Agency in Southern Africa |
|
|
380 | (17) |
|
|
PART VIII Engagement in Emergency |
|
|
397 | (52) |
|
29 What We Can Learn From Refugees |
|
|
399 | (14) |
|
|
30 Displacement, Labor and Incarceration: A Mid-Twentieth-Century Genealogy of Camps |
|
|
413 | (16) |
|
|
31 Are Architects the Last People Needed in Disaster Reconstruction? |
|
|
429 | (12) |
|
|
|
32 Architecture Without Borders? The Globalization of Humanitarian Architecture Culture |
|
|
441 | (8) |
|
Index |
|
449 | |