Calling all summer writers: @HOLCRedlining is issuing one last call for authors who would like to write introductory essays on cities for Mapping Inequality. Sign up now to knock out a ~500-word essay on any of these cities and get paid doing it: https://t.co/VhkWAA4XNL
“Will Kyiv’s Soviet Industrial Districts Survive? A Study of Transformation, Preservation, and Demolition of Industrial Heritage in Ukraine’s Capital” published in the Journal of Planning History in August, 2021. Learn more about the JPH Prize at https://t.co/I2lleMJEPr
SACRPH is now accepting nominations for its 2023 biennial awards. Today we cap off our spotlight of 2021 winners with the recipients of the Journal of Planning History Prize. @shtnastya and Brent D. Ryan at @MITdusp received the award for their article:
Gentrification is a fairly easy concept to understand & a well-studied one now for decades. If you'd like a very accessible movement-oriented syllabus and definition, put together by the people who built the largest tenants union in the country, go here: https://t.co/QUPzCPnQi4
Finance in Postwar Long Island.” @AngelaStiefbold was awarded for her dissertation at the @uofcincy, “Farming Scenery: Growing Support for Agricultural Land Preservation, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, 1930-1990.” Learn more about the John Reps Prizes at https://t.co/I2lleMJ6ZT
Since nominations are open for SACRPH's biennial awards, let's spotlight the co-winners of the 2021 John Reps Prizes for best doctoral dissertation and master’s thesis. @m_r_glass, now at @BostonCollege, was awarded for his dissertation “Schooling Suburbia: The Politics of School
And of course: @lwinling at @virginia_tech, and @ToddMichney at @GeorgiaTech for “Roots of Redlining: Academic, Governmental, and Professional Networks in the Making of the New Deal Lending Regime,” also in the @JournAmHist.
Since nominations are open for SACRPH's biennial awards, let's spotlight the co-winners of the 2021 Catherine Bauer Wurster Prize for best scholarly article on American city and regional planning history. Find out more about the Wurster Prize at https://t.co/I2lleMJ6ZT. First up:
Since nominations are open for SACRPH's biennial awards, let's spotlight the winner of the 2021 Lewis Mumford Prize. @apaigeoutofhist at @uwmadison was recognized for her book How the Suburbs Were Segregated. Find out more about the Mumford Prize: https://t.co/I2lleMJ6ZT
Since nominations are open for SACRPH's biennial awards, let's spotlight the winner of the 2021 Laurence Gerckens Prize. Lawrence Vale was recognized for his outstanding teaching and mentorship at @MITdusp. Find out more about the Gerckens Prize: https://t.co/I2lleMJ6ZT.
SACRPH invites submissions for our biennial awards competition. We present several awards for outstanding research and teaching in North American city and regional planning history. Deadline: August 1st. More info here: https://t.co/I2lleMJ6ZT
@SACRPH We hope you can join us for next week's virtual roundtable with historians who teach in professional schools, including: @merlinc2, @clairemdunning, @ATErickson, @kmschank, and Matt Lasner. Register at: https://t.co/a12B6xgbJP
Looking forward to this @sacrph conversation about teaching and doing history in professional schools - education, public health, planning, architecture, design - on May 8. Join us!
https://t.co/BmfhN2nyRR
I’m happy to see my review of "The Long Crisis: New York City and the Path to Neoliberalism," by @holtzman_b, is out now in the Journal of Planning History (@SACRPH). Spoiler alert: It's a great book https://t.co/lrwOg4eSWn
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"A Community Archive Documents Decades of Radical Activism Against Police Brutality---A look at Interference Archive’s “Defend / Defund” exhibit" via @inthesetimesmag re: @InterferenceArc https://t.co/7xdJQK4j83