• Patterns of Post-socialist Urban Development in Russia and Germany
    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.846956

    Since 1990, urbanization in post-socialist countries has frequently resulted in a loss of urban density in the existing building stock while land use patterns at the outskirts of growing city regions began to sprawl. Formerly state-planned and controlled housing forms as well as industrial and business enterprises were suddenly exposed to new market interests and finance-led investments in a globalizing world. In the initial adaptation to socio-economic transformation pressures after the fall of the iron curtain, the countries in question took different approaches in the governance of urbanization trends. The comparison of urban development between Russian and Eastern German city regions showcases two contrasting examples. Urban development in Russian city regions is largely driven by (...)

  • Knowledge Practices within and beyond Sharing and Commoning Urban Initiatives
    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.767365

    Within the context of neoliberal cities, with growing levels of housing commodification and space competition, sharing and commoning urban initiatives, within the larger framework of urban social movements, are shaping tactics of contestation. To what extent they represent sustainable efforts to urban commons governance remains largely unexplored. This paper aims therefore to contribute to better understand how practices of solidarity can be maintained beyond their first productive phase and in particular the engagement of social movement and initiatives actors in the production and maintenance of shared spatial resources. To do that, we focus on knowledge practices as a key factor to ensure sustainability of actions within and beyond urban initiatives that engage with and practice (...)

  • Postcolonial Italy. Mapping Colonial Heritage

    Even though the period of Italian colonial rule is long gone, its material traces hide almost everywhere. Explore cities, their streets, squares, monuments, and find out more about their forgotten connections to colonial history.

    https://postcolonialitaly.com

    Exemple, Turin :

    #Cagliari #Bolzano #Florence #Firenze #Roma #Rome #Turin #Torino #Trieste #Venise #Venezia #cartographie #héritage #colonialisme #colonialisme_italien #Italie_coloniale #traces #villes #cartographie_participative
    #TRUST #Master_TRUST

    ping @cede @postcolonial

    –---

    ajouté à la métaliste sur le colonialisme italien :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/871953

  • Frontiers 2022 : Noise, Blazes and Mismatches

    Un chapitre du #rapport dédié au #bruit dans les #villes :

    The chapter titled Listening to Cities: From Noisy Environments to Positive Soundscapes draws attention to noise pollution and its long-term physical and mental health impacts, along with measures that can be implemented to create positive and restorative soundscapes in urban areas.

    https://www.unep.org/resources/frontiers-2022-noise-blazes-and-mismatches

    #soundscape #urban_matter #pollution_sonore
    #TRUST #Master_TRUST

  • Community and Commons (Urban Concepts)
    https://urbanpolitical.podigee.io/50-community_commons

    In this first episode of the Urban Concept series, Louis Volont (MIT, Boston) and Thijs Lijster (University of Groningen) discuss with Talja Blokland (Humboldt University, Berlin) the concepts of community and commons and consider implications for urban research and action. The series introduces key urban concepts and reflects on their relevance in the fields of theory, research and politics.

    #urban,political,community,commons,concepts,research,politics,Esposito,Ostrom
    https://main.podigee-cdn.net/media/podcast_13964_urban_political_pdcst_episode_717748_community_and_c

  • Justice and the Pandemic City: How the Pandemic Has Revealed Social, Urban, and Data Injustices, and How a Narrative Approach Can Unlock Them
    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.838084

    The global COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated infrastructural, societal, and resource inequalities along racial and socioeconomic lines. Many countries have struggled to provide adequate COVID testing and healthcare. Denmark has been exceptional in its investment in a hyper-efficient and ever-present infrastructure, with testing tents distributed across the country. In this article we ask: What is the impact of this infrastructure in terms of the (urban) culture that is built around testing? And what does that mean in terms of data management and mass surveillance? As a public good, the COVID-19 testing infrastructure has costs and benefits, but these are not always clear. They concern future urban life and data management, and our ability to draw a boundary around ourselves—that is, (...)

  • #Timelayers

    Use TIMELAYERS to inscribe fragments of the past and projects of the future into physical urban space and help change how we perceive cities.

    TIMELAYERS turns urban space into an immersive exhibition of past and future. The city becomes a museum that preserves and brings to life urban memory of citizens and visitors in an inclusive and participatory process.


    http://timelayers.org

    #palimpseste #visualisation #villes #urban_matter #mémoire #passé #application #smartphone #couches #transformations_urbaines #TRUST #master_TRUST

    via @cede

    ping @fil

  • Effects of Blue-Green Infrastructures on the Microclimate in an Urban Residential Area Under Hot Weather
    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.824779

    With the expansion of cities, the urban population explodes globally, and the thermal environment continues to deteriorate. The studies on urban microclimate have important implications for the construction of green communities and the sustainable development of cities. Various blue-green infrastructures (BGIs) in the urban ecosystem play an important role in regulating urban microclimate and human thermal comfort. This study investigated the current microclimate of a residential area (Chigang community, Guangzhou) under hot weather by carrying out field surveys. Subsequently, a model was established with ENVI-met to simulate the microclimate conditions under different BGIs scenarios. The results showed that adding water bodies can improve the thermal comfort of residential areas. The (...)

  • À l’épreuve des #murs. Sécurisation et pratiques politiques dans le centre-ville du #Caire postrévolutionnaire (2014-2015)

    La révolution égyptienne de 2011 s’est caractérisée par une lutte pour l’appropriation de l’#espace_public. Elle a été analysée comme une démocratie en actes où les révolutionnaires se sont réappropriés par leurs pratiques et leurs stratégies un espace trop longtemps sécurisé par le gouvernement de Moubarak. Cet article vise à étudier en contre-point les stratégies territoriales de l’État pour le contrôle des espaces publics depuis 2011 et en particulier depuis 2013 avec le renforcement de la #répression envers les #Frères_musulmans et l’arrivée au pouvoir des militaires. Ces stratégies sont mises en évidence dans le cas du #centre-ville, épicentre de la #révolution mais aussi de la représentation et de l’exercice du pouvoir politique. Elles se caractérisent par des pratiques de #cantonnement des #manifestations et par l’instauration de #barrières et de #checkpoints dans le centre-ville du Caire, constituant un véritable dispositif territorialisé et planifié de contrôle des rassemblements publics et des revendications politiques. Cet article vise donc également à analyser les conséquences de ce #contrôle sur les pratiques politiques des opposants au régime à l’échelle locale du centre-ville du Caire à travers la restitution d’observations et d’entretiens menés entre 2014 et 2015.


    https://journals.openedition.org/ema/3705#quotation

    #murs_intra-urbains #Egypte #Le_Caire #urban_matter #villes

    • ‘Free Ukraine Street’ : Russian Embassies Get Pointed New Addresses

      Officials in many European cities are giving streets, squares and intersections in front of Russian missions names with pro-Ukraine themes.

      The unassuming intersection in front of the Russian Embassy in central Oslo didn’t really have a name until Tuesday, when its local council bestowed on it a particularly pointed one: “Ukrainas Plass,” or Ukraine’s Square.

      “We wanted to make a statement that we find Russia’s actions totally unacceptable,” said Tore Walaker, a councilor for Frogner, the neighborhood where the embassy is, which has been the scene of spirited protests since the Russian invasion.

      Russian embassy staff will soon have to pass a sign identifying the area as Ukraine’s Square on their way to work, said Jens Jorgen Lie, the chairman of the Frogner borough council.

      “It’s not helping to stop the war,” he said. “But we do the little we can and must.”

      As Russian embassies have become a focus for protests in Europe and around the world against President Vladimir V. Putin, officials in some European cities are expressing their outrage at the invasion of Ukraine by trying to change street names.

      In the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius, an unnamed street leading to the Russian Embassy was officially named “Ukrainian Heroes Street” on Wednesday, according to the city’s mayor, Remigijus Simasius, who added that mail might not be delivered to the embassy if it did not use the new address. “Everyone who writes a letter to the embassy will have to think about the victims of Russian aggression and the heroes of Ukraine,” he said in a post on Facebook.

      Tirana, the Albanian capital, said it would name a street segment that is home to the Russian Embassy “Free Ukraine.” In Latvia, the Russian Embassy in Riga will now lie on “Ukraine Independence Street,” according to a local deputy mayor. And in Copenhagen, city officials will next week discuss changing the name of the street on which the Russian Embassy sits from “Kristianiagade” to “Ukrainegade.”

      In England, lawmakers have lobbied for the street address of the Russian Embassy in London to be switched to “Zelensky Avenue,” after the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, who vowed in an address to Britain’s House of Commons this week that he would never surrender to Russian forces. “Britain must shame Putin at every possible opportunity,” said Layla Moran, a spokeswoman on foreign affairs for the Liberal Democrats.

      The borough of Kensington and Chelsea, an affluent area that contains the Russian, Ukrainian and other embassies, said it supported the Ukrainian community, but had not yet received any official applications to change the name of the street.

      “We share the world’s anger at Putin’s assault on Ukraine and are horrified at the plight of the men, women and children caught up in the conflict,” the borough said in a statement, but added: “It is actions rather than symbolism that they desperately need now.”

      The proposals for name changes have been met with largely positive reactions from supporters of Ukraine, though some question the effectiveness of such symbolic moves. Others have said the renaming of streets should be even more extensive.

      In Oslo, Eugenia Khoroltseva, an activist with family in Ukraine and Russia who has demonstrated near what is now Ukraine’s Square since the invasion began, said of the renaming: “I fully support it on behalf of the pro-democratic Russian community living in Norway.”

      In a statement on Wednesday, the Russian Embassy in Oslo said the move would be “regarded as an anti-Russian action, whether by the government or the district authorities. Norwegians should consider this.”

      In Copenhagen, the Russian Embassy noted that its street — Kristianiagade — carried the former name of Norway’s capital, a symbol of “historical bonds and good relationships between Denmark and Norway.”

      “I think the Norwegians will understand,” said Jakob Ellemann-Jensen, a Danish lawmaker who is leading the proposal for renaming the street Ukrainegade. “I think there are many things we should do to help the Ukrainians. There is no action that is too small.”

      The inspiration, he added, came from the naming of a plaza in front the Russian Embassy in Washington after Boris Nemtsov, the Russian opposition leader and outspoken critic of Mr. Putin who was assassinated in 2015. A similar proposal to rename a square outside a Russian consulate was made by a politician last year in the town of Kirkenes, close to the Norwegian-Russian border, but was met with resistance.
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      “This is a war we will never forget and a war that the Russians should never forget,” Mr. Ellemann-Jensen said.

      https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/10/world/europe/ukraine-russia-war-embassies-street-names.html

    • Guerre en Ukraine : à #Dnipro, des russophones font tout pour ne plus parler russe

      Dans une partie de l’Ukraine, la langue la plus couramment parlée est le russe. Mais pour de nombreux habitants, la guerre ravive un élan patriotique qui passe aussi par une réappropriation de la langue ukrainienne. Illustration à Dnipro, en plein cœur du pays.

      (...)

      Et dans cette guerre linguistique, la ville de Dnipro prend aussi sa part. "Nous avons changé les dénominations d’une trentaine de rues, confirme Mirailo Lysenko, maire adjoint en charge de l’aménagement.

      "La plupart [des rues] ont pris le nom de nos #villes_martyres et d’autres ont pris le nom d’importantes personnalités ukrainiennes, conclut Mirailo Lysenko. Les nouvelles plaques sont en train d’être fabriquées. Dans quelques semaines, le passage Moscovite va ainsi devenir #passage_Azovstal, du nom de cette usine métallurgique symbole de la résistance de #Marioupol.

      https://www.francetvinfo.fr/monde/europe/manifestations-en-ukraine/reportage-guerre-en-ukraine-a-dnipro-des-habitants-font-tout-pour-ne-pl

    • Russia not waging campaign against Ukraine’s culture, says diplomat

      “Russia have not launched a campaign to demolish monuments to prominent Ukrainians or rename streets, bearing their names, and have never done so,” Maria Zakharova stressed

      Russia has never sought to harm Ukraine’s #culture in any way, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told a news briefing on Friday.

      “Who has ever tried to intentionally damage Ukraine’s cultural heritage, when and in what way?” Zakharova said. “Unlike our neighbors, we have never been prone to such behavior. We have not launched a campaign to demolish monuments to prominent Ukrainians or rename streets, bearing their names, and have never done so.”

      The EU’s accusations against Russia of damaging Ukraine’s cultural heritage cause confusion, Zakharova said. “What are you talking about? Do the people, who level such claims, know anything about our common history, about present-day reality?”

      The EU’s weapons supplies to Ukraine are in conflict with the objective to protect and restore Ukraine’s cultural heritage the bloc has been declaring, the diplomat said.

      “That’s another example of Brussels’ destructive logic: it is prepared to sacrifice basic principles of international humanitarian cooperation and politicize culture, sports, science and youth policy, while pursuing its aims or the aims imposed on it,” Zakharova said.

      https://tass.com/politics/1460203

      #monuments

  • Ukrainian Cities at War

    Listen to urban researchers sharing their insights on the situation in Ukrainian cities at war, from #Kyiv, #Kharkiv to #Mariupol. Our guests discuss Putin’s identity politics and the way his propaganda hits a wall in the context of the shelling of Ukrainian cities. Countering the images of an opposition of “Ukrainian vs Russian” inhabitants as a backdrop to the war, the discussants offer a different perspective on how ethnicity and language have played out prior to the war. At the same time, they take on predominant Western European understandings of politics and economics of Ukraine and draw a picture of a complex society that becomes more united in the context of a common enemy.

    https://urbanpolitical.podigee.io/49-ukrainian_cities_at_war
    #villes #guerre #urban_matter #Ukraine #propagande #villes_ukrainiennes #ethnicité #langue #image #géographie_urbaine
    #podcast

    ping @isskein @karine4 @_kg_

  • Eaux usées : cocktail toxique ou précieux ? - Regarder le documentaire complet | ARTE
    https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/104835-000-A/eaux-usees-cocktail-toxique-ou-precieux

    Aujourd’hui, les entrailles des villes sont parcourues par un vaste réseau de canalisations contenant un cocktail douteux d’eaux usées. Mais dans ce bouillon nauséabond se cachent également des trésors. Au nord-ouest de Paris, la station d’épuration d’Achères traite environ 80 % des eaux usées de la capitale. Un échantillon y est prélevé par une équipe de scientifiques, avant d’être envoyé puis analysé en Allemagne. L’étude comparative des substances contenues dans les rejets parisiens et berlinois livre de précieux renseignements sur les médicaments et les drogues consommés par les habitants des deux villes, mais aussi sur les produits chimiques industriels auxquels ils sont exposés.

    @diala vers la fin, on y parle réusage du pipi et du caca pour l’agriculture

  • Effects of Smart Traffic Signal Control on Air Quality
    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.756539

    Adaptive traffic signal control (ATSC) in urban traffic networks poses a challenging task due to the complicated dynamics arising in traffic systems. In recent years, several approaches based on multi-agent deep reinforcement learning (MARL) have been studied experimentally. These approaches propose distributed techniques in which each signalized intersection is seen as an agent in a stochastic game whose purpose is to optimize the flow of vehicles in its vicinity. In this setting, the systems evolves toward an equilibrium among the agents that shows beneficial for the whole traffic network. A recently developed multi-agent variant of the well-established advantage actor-critic (A2C) algorithm, called MA2C (multi-agent A2C) exploits the promising idea of some communication among the (...)

  • Building Emergent Cycling Infrastructure During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Case of Zapopan, México
    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2022.805125

    The COVID-19 pandemic has led to strict measures intended to limit people’s movement and slow viral spread. The subsequent need for social distancing when traveling has driven many cities to reduce public transport services, as urban residents simultaneously stay at home and avoid crowded spaces. As a result, cities are turning to cycling to meet the mobility needs of their inhabitants, particularly those who lack access to a private vehicle. Infrastructure plays a critical role in encouraging cycling by protecting cyclists and providing safe and comfortable conditions for users of various confidence levels. Due to the pandemic, this infrastructure has been rapidly constructed, in many cases, as pop-up or temporary installations. In this article, we present and examine the design (...)

  • Budgeting Justice. Cities must empower historically marginalized communities to shape how public funds are spent

    During the summer of 2020, protestors demanded that George Floyd’s, Breonna Taylor’s, and too many others’ murderers be charged and convicted. They also demanded that cities nationwide defund the police. The Black Lives Matter uprisings provoked intense conversations regarding systemic racism in U.S. policing and foregrounded the need for institutional reforms.

    In the year since, responses have been woefully inadequate. Though Derek Chauvin was found guilty of killing Floyd, the prosecution’s case hardly mentioned race. Beyond his conviction, cities around the country issued apology statements for institutionalized racism—acknowledging the role of urban planners in redlining and the disinvestment of Black communities—and formed commissions for racial justice. But the results have been disappointing. The Philadelphia commission on Pathways to Reform, Transformation, and Reconciliation, for instance, only launched economic programs aimed at Black small business owners, not wage workers, freelancers, and the unemployed.

    These top-down moves give companies and governments a semblance of righteous action, even as they leave intact the histories and structures that enable police violence. They fail to redistribute funds away from police departments and toward new visions of community safety, freedom, and spaces where all individuals can thrive.

    To address police brutality, cities need budget justice: public budgets that give historically marginalized communities resources to address their needs. Budget justice requires a new sort of democracy that emphasizes three points of practice: first, budgets are moral documents that make explicit what communities choose to divest from and invest in; two, direct democracy must engage everyday constituents, rather than elected representatives, in a range of decision-making conversations and actions about collective needs; three, micropolitics must reshape the rules and expectations regarding whose knowledge, expertise, and lived experience shapes state policy and collective action.

    Policymakers usually make budget decisions behind closed doors. When elected officials do make public budgets transparent, they often present them as neutral documents and claim that “numbers don’t lie.” Budget numbers do, however, often obfuscate our everyday circumstances and needs. For example, without a sense of historical data or where exactly money is going, it would be difficult to discern whether additional funds for a particular school benefit all of the students, barely make up for the prior year’s budget cuts, or add amenities for a small selection of honors students. While public budgets are often portrayed as technical and impersonal, they are moral documents that reflect specific public values and theories of government.

    Taking cues from the platform articulated by the Movement 4 Black Lives, focusing on the budget part of budget justice prompts communities to articulate divest-invest strategies that redirect money away from expenditures the community doesn’t value and toward those it does. For instance, in the summer of 2020, protestors camped out in front of City Hall for more than a month, asking the New York Mayor and the City Council to cut the police budget by $1 billion and instead invest in community care: healthcare and social services, child and elderly care, and well-maintained streets, gardens, parks, and public spaces. Although the police eventually cleared the encampment, the monthlong Occupy City Hall protests significantly shaped the 2021 fiscal year budget, with more than $865 million in cuts to the police department’s operating expenses compared to the 2020 budget. (DeBlasio explicitly acknowledged the protests’ impact by including lower fringe benefits in his calculations, so that he could claim $1 billion in cuts.) The defund the police aspect of budget justice has received attention and deservingly so, but we also need new tools to meaningfully redistribute and invest money. In my work with activists, I have heard laments on how communities must articulate a vision of the different worlds we should work toward. Demands would then concern not just community safety and violence prevention, but all policy domains shaped by racial and class inequalities.

    We cannot expect such ideas to come from policymakers and those in power. Those most impacted by over-policing, carceral capitalism, unaffordable housing, and underfunded schools must make budget decisions. Likewise, many of the participants in the current uprisings against police brutality argue that voting is not enough; they claim that demographic or descriptive representation and placing “Black faces in high places,” as Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor writes, have not addressed racial inequalities nor stopped the killing of Black Americans. Empowerment entails more than fighting voter suppression and fixing the electoral college. The road to budget justice emphasizes new modes of democracy—such as citizens’ assemblies and mini publics—that give participants opportunities for deliberation, not just picking from ready-made menus of policies or ballots.

    Our greatest challenge is breaking out of the confines of our popular imagination in radical ways and creating new social, economic, and political relations. As public policy is currently governed by racial hierarchies and neoliberal logics of competition, deservingness, respectability politics, and individual responsibility, struggling communities are too busy competing against one another to build a better world. Logics of competition undergird means-tested services for unhoused people, for instance, and expanding opportunities for bootstrapped hard work (through “uplift” and entrepreneurial mindsets, education, cultural competence, or plain hustle and “grit”). These are all formulated inside the box of austerity and mainstream liberal inclusion.

    We need new models altogether for grants and urban planning. We must demand substantively different models for affordable housing, schools, and public space. This asks cities to not just improve the numbers (of Black enterprises) in the current system, but to change the relationships between real estate developers, residents, and urban planners. In other words, this requires each of us to engage our communities’ experiences with racial capitalism and then change the criteria that determines the beneficiaries of current public policies and budgets.

    Changing these relationships begins with micropolitics, or what others have called prefigurative politics, which occurs outside official voting and formal advocacy. It involves mutual aid collectives, neighbors helping neighbors without asking for their résumés or histories of suffering, and constituents allocating funds to policies and projects that address community needs. It involves paying attention to community members’ local knowledges and lived experiences. The work of micropolitics reshapes participants’ class and racial subjectivities—the stories we tell ourselves about the positions we hold in social hierarchies and the roles we play vis-à-vis the government and one another. Realizing budget justice requires that community members themselves articulate the criteria we wish to live by, forwarding new logics of collective care and community control.

    The contemporary goal of budget justice attempts to pay tribute to the idea of abolition democracy W. E. B. Du Bois examined in Black Reconstruction in America (1935) almost ninety years ago. In recent decades, Black feminist, intersectional, queer, indigenous, critical race, and anticolonial scholarship have pinpointed just how systemic hierarchies persist in the afterlives of slavery and empire. As Harsha Walia writes, abolition democracy also demands the “imagining and generating of alternative institutions . . . prefiguring societies based on equity, mutual aid, and self-determination.” This project of world-building must be rooted in on-the-ground community organizing and participatory democratic experiments.

    Attempts to realize budget justice already exist. A number of cities, such as Los Angeles, Nashville, and Seattle, have articulated new funding priorities in lieu of policing. This has occurred against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the U.S. government has failed to coordinate adequate testing, protective equipment, and epidemiologically sound guidance, as well as offer support during remote schooling, job loss, and massive loss of life.

    Integral to such efforts is participatory budgeting (PB), a process by which residents, rather than elected officials, allocate public funds. Since it first began in Porto Alegre, Brazil in 1989, PB has spread to over 3,000 cities worldwide. In past cases of PB, diversity in participation by gender, income, and racial background contributed to the legitimacy, continuity, and redistributive potential of the processes. In the United States, PB has spread from a single local process in 2010 to over 500 currently active district, city, or institutional processes. PB attempts to give stakeholders an opportunity to draw upon their knowledge of local needs, articulate proposals, interact with neighbors, deliberate over priorities, and select—not just consult on—which proposals receive funding. In so doing, it lays out budget questions in tractable ways and helps individuals understand how city bureaucracies work. But some researchers have argued that PB has morphed from an empowering and democratizing process into a politically malleable, innocuous set of procedures that reflect subtle domination by elites or legitimize pro forma decisions by policymakers. Indeed, PB can be misused to reinforce existing racial hierarchies.

    New York City has the country’s largest PB process by far; since 2012, New Yorkers have decided how to spend more than $250 million on almost 1,000 projects through PBNYC. I draw on a decade of fieldwork on PBNYC to ground my ideals of budget justice, the limits and uses of the groundwork laid thus far, and how communities might build upon PB processes for budget justice.

    I conducted fieldwork in East Harlem, where residents gathered at PB assemblies and met in school cafeterias and auditoriums to discuss what they wanted to spend public funds on. A middle-aged white man from the Upper West Side had walked across town to come to a neighborhood assembly and pitch new amenities for his daughter’s school. As he listened to mostly Asian American, Latinx, and Black neighbors, especially elderly ones, talk about the need for laundry in their buildings and the neighborhood’s largest concentration of public housing in the country, he changed his mind. He decided to withdraw his proposal for his daughter’s school and instead help his neighbors advance their proposals.

    Through exchanges such as these, communities around New York have used PB to articulate and reprioritize funding allocations. An analysis by Carolin Hagelskamp, Rebecca Silliman, Erin Godfrey, and David Schleifer shows that from 2009 to 2018, capital spending in districts with PB were markedly different from those without. Schools and public housing, for instance, received more funding, while parks and housing preservation received less.

    Whereas electoral politics typically engage the “usual suspects”—higher-income, older constituents—PB engages traditionally marginalized constituents, including youth, formerly incarcerated constituents, and undocumented immigrants. The first citywide rulebook dictated that anyone over sixteen who lives, works, attends school, or is the parent of a student in a district could participate in neighborhood assemblies and project-vetting, and residents over eighteen, including undocumented immigrants, could vote on the allocations. Enthusiastic and strikingly fruitful youth participation in neighborhood assemblies then convinced adults to lower the PB voting age to sixteen and the participation age to fourteen in 2012. The voting age has been lowered almost every subsequent year, now standing at age eleven.

    Research coordinated by the Community Development Project shows that nearly one-quarter of people who voted in NYC’s PB process were not eligible to do so in typical elections. Carolina Johnson, H. Jacob Carlson, and Sonya Reynolds found that PB participants were 8.4 percent more likely to vote than those who had not participated in the process; the effects are even greater for those who have lower probabilities of voting, such as low-income and Black voters.

    Indeed, participants repeatedly stated that the PB process allowed them to engage in discussions with neighbors they otherwise wouldn’t have met, the proverbial “other” in deliberations. They emphasized PB’s deliberative nature, its encouragement to exchange ideas and compromise. This differs from electoral politics, even for those already politically active. For one participant, the combination of working with others unlike herself and working toward binding budgetary decisions gave the PB process a sense of impact lacking in her usual civic engagement.

    My interviews with PB participants revealed the potential for alliances between groups of residents and organizations who might usually lobby for funds independently. They spoke to how the PB deliberations allowed them to emphasize more than one aspect of their lives and identities—for example, as African Americans, Harlemites, parents, public housing residents, or sports fans—and emphasize issues of intersectionality, rather than a single identity of race, gender, or other social axes. More than one interviewee stated that, like the Upper West Side resident, they ended up backing projects they would not have otherwise thought of or supported.

    PB thus serves as a necessary, though incomplete, node in a larger ecosystem of participation and mobilization for budget justice. I highlight three takeaways:

    First, PB must be expanded and deepened beyond its current design. The East Harlem exchange previously described could not have transpired even two years later, after City Council lines were redrawn in New York (East Harlem was zoned to be in the same district as lower-income South Bronx neighborhoods, rather than higher-income Upper West Side ones). That district’s PB process thus lost much of its redistributive potential. Unless the funds and scopes of projects are substantially expanded, PB remains the exception to how municipal budgeting usually works: a way for constituents to voice concerns, let off steam, and see some of their ideas come to fruition while most of the budget remains opaque and predetermined. (In the 2019-2020 cycle, New York City Councilmembers devoted over $35 million to the PB process. That year, the city’s budget totaled $96 billion dollars.)

    Second, by focusing exclusively on the invest side of the equation, PB will remain incomplete. It thus risks propagating the myth that the problem is a scarcity of funds, rather than austerity as a policy. PB in the United States is not consistently tied to explicit questions of funds’ origins; eligible funds are often those deemed easy, limited, regressive, or discretionary. In Vallejo, California, the citywide PB process allocates proceeds from a sales tax. Other PB funds have come from Community Development Block Grants. In other places, community groups have campaigned for PB processes to allocate the proceeds of court cases where firms had to pay hefty damages. In New York current PB funds come from City Councilmembers’ discretionary budgets; when the pandemic hit, all but a few paused their PB processes. In 2018 a referendum to change the City Charter and establish a mayor coordinated PB process was approved by a landslide, but Mayor de Blasio failed to adequately fund it. PB must be tied to larger policy campaigns, individual projects (as with Seattle’s Solidarity Budget), progressive tax policies, and divestments and investments.

    Third, PB deliberations were profoundly shaped by micropolitics, namely how participants related to each other and to civil servants and city bureaucrats, as well as whose arguments and proposals were deemed credible. PB deliberations could perpetuate existing inequalities without attention to epistemic justice—actively questioning what bodies of knowledge are counted as rational, true, and valuable and who is seen as an expert. In PB this concerns how city bureaucrats sideline local knowledge in favor of technical knowledge. In issues related to budget justice, someone with lived experience should be considered an expert on their own environments as much as someone who has crunched quantitative policy analyses or studied the law. Without attention to epistemic justice, technical experts can reject project ideas with significant community support.

    These are not simply quibbles about institutional design, but about power. On whose terms and to what ends is PB carried out? These are questions of quality as well as size and scope.

    Even if the entire New York City budget were subject to a participatory process, to what extent does the process enable constituents to forward project proposals that combat dominant discourses on what New York needs? To be sure, the city government’s budgeting becoming more transparent does not render it liberatory. In particular, the prevalence of surveillance cameras among New York City PB projects, especially in public housing, highlights PB’s limited power in contesting racist logics of austerity. Thus far, these surveillance camera projects have won funding every year.

    These PB projects prompted debates in neighborhoods with changing demographics, deep inequalities, and new real estate developments—in other words, vulnerability to hyper-gentrification and displacement. Long-term residents felt that the surveillance cameras were yet another sign that they were being pushed out and local budgets were being used to make newer, wealthier residents feel safe and welcome. Many residents believe that new residents—less likely to be Black or Brown—voted for these surveillance cameras operated by the New York Police Department.

    But participants of color also advocated for surveillance cameras. These proponents reported that they did so because their visions of community safety included greater police accountability and economic support as well as surveillance. In their proposals, it was crucial to include both bottom-up accountability and access to the video footage captured by cameras. PB should allow constituents to shape both what programs are administered and how. Interviews suggested that the more robust, nuanced proposals had been dismissed, whittled down, abandoned, or improperly implemented during the PB process.

    By contrast, when implemented well, PB can help communities articulate proposals that tend to everyone’s safety. In one Brooklyn district, local participants reached out to members of historically sidelined communities and translated proposals into formal, technical language deemed “proper” by city bureaucrats. They also convinced their local Councilmember to make more creative proposals—with no current precedent in the existing city budgets—eligible to receive PB funds. When hate crimes rose after the 2016 election, innovative projects funded through PB in this district included bystander/ “upstander” training for residents to safely intervene when they witness harassment or violence. Residents also voted to fund self-defense workshops by and for Bangladeshi and Muslim women.

    This stands in contrast to the national and ostensibly progressive responses to anti-Asian violence. The March 2021 shootings in Atlanta spas prompted Congress to pass the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act with rare, bipartisan support. However, the Act solely serves to allot more grant money to law enforcement agencies nationwide. In May President Biden signed it into law and deemed it a triumph against hate. This differs greatly from how members of affected communities would go about implementing change.

    PB entails tough conversations on the intersection between policing and gentrification, the availability of health and employment services, and how community safety policies should be executed and implemented. In this case of rising anti-Asian violence, it also entails conversations on whether additional policing would actually prevent individual acts of hate or address the white supremacy and austerity that sow systemic violence. The sorts of conversations that yielded the Muslim women’s self-defense workshops in Brooklyn, for example, also touched on histories of anti-Black urban policies, the War on Terror and anti-Asian xenophobia, and contradictions in popular discourse about Asian Americans as both model minorities and “foreigners.” Face-to-face dialogue and brainstorming help neighbors assist one another in concrete ways and articulate new roles based on solidarity, without fomenting racial resentments or hierarchies of oppression.

    The questions raised in PB deliberations prompt fraught conversations on race and class. Native-born, white residents report higher incomes than other residents. Moreover, higher-income, higher-educated residents may have the social networks and legal skills to navigate bureaucratic regulations more easily in municipal budgeting. Race continues to serve, as Stuart Hall put it, as a fundamental “modality in which class is lived. It is also the medium in which class relations are experienced.”

    Despite significant limitations, we know that PB is doing something in New York—if only because some city officials work so hard to contain it. Indeed, the most impressive and important impacts of New York’s PB process have not been the winning projects themselves. Rather, they lie in PB’s spillover effects and the changes prompted by the process itself.

    For example, from 2011 to 2013, parents and students were upset about putting PB discretionary funds toward school bathroom stalls, which felt like a basic need. The PB process mobilized them around this issue; in 2014, the Department of Education doubled its allocation for school bathrooms explicitly because of PB. By 2018 PBNYC had also sparked over $180 million in additional spending on specific, community-articulated priorities, such as air conditioning and bathroom repairs in schools. In another example, a former parent-teaching association (PTA) president angered by her wealthy school’s aggressive campaign in the local PB process led her to create a new organization explicitly aimed at helping PTAs at lower-income schools access funding.

    PB helps set new precedents for both spending priorities and how city agencies operate, and it helps to change residents’ expectations for city policymaking. For example, in addition to spending its budget differently, the Parks Department’s experiences with PB led it to design new websites to make it easier for residents to track its expenditures, including not-yet-implemented ones.

    When—as in the school bathrooms and PTA cases above—PB’s limits leave participants frustrated, indignant, and angry, the process has also trained constituents to want, demand, and fight for more. PB can hence serve as site for politicization. One participant, for instance, had never worked on a community issue before; she built upon her PB experiences to become a member of her public housing tenants’ union and then a tenant organizer, winning significant concessions for her housing project.

    PB can thus contribute to budget justice when it is tied to mobilization and ecologies of care. Indeed, many of the New Yorkers now active in mutual aid efforts during the pandemic became adept at non-hierarchical organizing and decision-making through PB, and several of the more recent PB projects funded during the pandemic, such as diaper distribution centers throughout Brooklyn, build upon mutual aid networks. Communities can only achieve budget justice if we combine seemingly disparate forms of resistance and care in strategic ways with a clear eye to the future. In so doing, we conceptualize democracy not as a set of institutions, but a set of practices and situated solidarities.

    https://bostonreview.net/articles/budgeting-justice/#

    #villes #budget #justice #budget_participatif #démocratie #TRUST #Master_TRUST #budget_public #aménagement_urbain #urbanisme #justice_budgétaire

  • Londres tente de survivre au coût de la vie Marco Fortier à Londres - Le Devoir
    https://www.ledevoir.com/monde/europe/671619/le-devoir-au-royaume-uni-londres-tente-de-survivre-au-cout-de-la-vie

    La banque alimentaire la plus improbable de Londres se trouve à deux pas de la City, le cœur financier de la ville. Il faut chercher longtemps pour repérer l’organisme Food For All (Nourriture pour tous), niché dans le stationnement souterrain d’un immeuble anonyme, dans une petite rue sans issue.

    En descendant la rampe conçue pour les camions de livraison, on arrive dans un entrepôt humide, faiblement éclairé par des guirlandes lumineuses, où semble régner un chaos indescriptible. Une immense sculpture de quatre mètres, figurant un humain à tête de lion, ornée de paillettes et de lumières colorées, accueille les visiteurs.


    Photo : Frank Augstein Associated Press Les pauvres et les gens de la classe moyenne n’ont plus les moyens de vivre à Londres, à moins d’avoir la chance rarissime de mettre la main sur un logement social.

    Les apparences sont toutefois trompeuses. On entre ici dans une véritable machine à distribuer des repas, qui nourrit 2000 personnes par jour dans 40 points de distribution. « La demande augmente sans cesse. L’explosion du coût de la vie est la plus grande urgence en ce moment », dit Peter O’Grady, fondateur de cette œuvre de bienfaisance hors norme.

    Ce « vieux punk » de 58 ans, adepte de Hare Krishna, nous accueille dans son antre où s’active une dizaine de bénévoles en ce samedi midi de février. La chaleur humaine et les odeurs d’épices indiennes compensent l’aspect austère de l’endroit : on a l’impression d’entrer dans un lieu interdit, « souterrain », qui se trouve littéralement dans le sous-sol de Londres. « Pourquoi on est ici ? Parce que ça ne nous coûte pas trop cher de loyer, on a un bon deal », dit en souriant Peter O’Grady.

    Lui et son équipe tiennent à bout de bras cette soupe populaire depuis 1988. Il a commencé par nourrir une poignée de sans-abri en allant recueillir les dons des restaurants en fin de soirée. Au fil des ans, l’organisme de charité s’est affilié aux grandes banques alimentaires de Londres. Des dons d’entreprises et d’illustres mécènes comme Chrissie Hynde, chanteuse des Pretenders, ou Liam Payne, du groupe One Direction, complètent le tableau financier.

    Les « clients » de Food For All ont changé de visage depuis trois décennies. Ce ne sont plus nécessairement des itinérants, mais plutôt des travailleurs à petit salaire, des étudiants, des réfugiés, des mères de famille monoparentale, des retraités qui peinent à payer la facture d’électricité. Des gens de la classe moyenne, parfois.

    « Avant, les étudiants avaient les moyens de manger à leur faim, de payer le loyer et leur carte mensuelle de transport en commun. Plus maintenant. Pour beaucoup de monde, c’est eat or heat [la nourriture ou le chauffage]. J’ai même un ami de 58 ans qui est retourné vivre chez sa mère ! » lance Peter O’Grady.

    L’explosion du coût de la vie est une des plus grandes préoccupations des Britanniques. Davantage que la crise politique qui secoue le gouvernement de Boris Johnson, les risques de guerre en Ukraine, les listes d’attente dans les hôpitaux ou même la pandémie, qui ne fait plus les manchettes au Royaume-Uni.

    Se nourrir et se loger n’a jamais été aussi cher. La facture d’électricité et de gaz naturel risque d’augmenter de 54 % à compter du mois d’avril. Les économistes prévoient une inflation de 7 % dans les mois à venir, du jamais vu depuis des décennies. Les taux d’intérêt ont aussi commencé à augmenter, ce qui laissera encore moins d’argent dans les poches des travailleurs.

    Comme ailleurs dans le monde, les perturbations des chaînes de production et d’approvisionnement dues à la pandémie sont en bonne partie responsables de la crise, selon les économistes.

    « C’est terrible. Au Canada, vous avez des camionneurs qui manifestent contre les mesures sanitaires. Je crois qu’ici, on s’en va plutôt vers des émeutes pour dénoncer le coût de la vie », dit Ralph Urban, un retraité venu faire du bénévolat chez Food For All.

    Il s’apprête à monter à bord de la camionnette qui sillonne la ville pour distribuer les repas à des groupes communautaires. Avant de partir, Ralph Urban fait le plein de carburant : il savoure un cari végétarien cuisiné dans la mythique marmite géante de son ami Peter. Les bénévoles mangent gratuitement chez Food For All. Il ne faut pas le dire trop fort, mais des lits sont aussi offerts de façon informelle à ceux qui en ont besoin. Les entrailles de la caverne d’Ali Baba regorgent de ressources.

    Ce midi-là, une dizaine de jeunes sont venus éplucher des patates, couper des carottes, émincer des oignons, ranger des sacs de farine, faire une tournée de livraison à vélo, passer le balai ou laver la vaisselle en échange d’un bol de cari indien. Des étudiants, des travailleurs, qui composent avec les hauts et les bas de la vie dans une des villes les plus chères du monde.

    Certains clients et bénévoles ont besoin de services sociaux. Êtes-vous aussi travailleur social, Peter ? « Tout ce qu’on peut offrir, ce sont des mots de réconfort et quelques blagues », dit-il entre deux appels sur son vieux téléphone pas du tout intelligent.

    Survie 101
    Après avoir dit au revoir à Peter O’Grady et à ses amis, qui continuent de besogner dans leur repaire souterrain, on est ébloui par la lumière du jour. Les trottoirs de la City sont bondés de promeneurs qui profitent de cette journée de congé.

    Près de là, dans le quartier Clerkenwell en plein embourgeoisement, un jeune couple observe les maisons à vendre affichées dans la vitrine d’un courtier immobilier. Un loft à 1,5 million de livres sterling (2,5 millions de dollars canadiens). Un mini-logement de 750 pieds carrés à 1,4 million de dollars. Une maison en rangée de brique brune à 2,7 millions de dollars. De biens jolies résidences, mais on ne parle quand même pas du château de Windsor, où logent Sa Majesté la reine et sa suite.

    « On regarde ce qu’on n’aura jamais les moyens de se payer. C’est comme si on n’était plus les bienvenus dans notre propre ville », dit l’homme en soupirant.

    Les pauvres et les gens de la classe moyenne n’ont plus les moyens de vivre à Londres, à moins d’avoir la chance rarissime de mettre la main sur un logement social. On dit aussi que des retraités ayant acheté une maison au siècle dernier, avant l’explosion des prix, sont forcés de vendre parce qu’ils n’ont pas les reins assez solides pour payer les taxes municipales.

    Une véritable industrie de la « survie au coût de la vie » est en train de prendre forme. Les experts proposent des conseils aux Londoniens qui veulent s’exiler en région, ou aux étudiants étrangers tentés par les universités britanniques.

    L’entreprise de services financiers Wise a publié dès le mois d’août 2021 un guide soulignant les avantages pour les expatriés de s’établir à Cardiff (pays de Galles), à Édimbourg (Écosse) ou à Belfast (Irlande du Nord) pour en avoir plus pour leur argent.

    Le coût mensuel de location d’un appartement d’une chambre au centre de Londres est estimé à 1662 livres sterling (2860 $). Pour trois chambres, le loyer grimpe à 3188 livres sterling (5490 $). À ces tarifs, il vaut peut-être mieux louer un logement situé près d’une soupe populaire pour pouvoir se nourrir.

    Ce reportage a été en partie financé grâce au soutien du Fonds de journalisme international Transat-Le Devoir.

    #pauvreté #classe_moyenne #inégalités #économie #précarité #richesse #pauvres #politique #logement #capitalisme #discrimination #racisme #guerre_aux_pauvres #gentrification #urbanisme #logement #ville #villes #inégalités

    • La classe moyenne imagine, depuis un demi siècle qu’elle a intérêt à soutenir les intérêts des trés riches. Elle en paye donc la facture. Elle a toujours pas compris. L’exclusion c’est aussi pour elle.

  • MORTAL CITIES. Forgotten Monuments

    A revealing study of the effect of war damage on inhabitants of a city and on the potential of architecture and urban design to reconcile people with the loss of urban structure and cultural symbols.

    As a child, architect #Arna_Mačkić experienced firsthand the Bosnian civil war, and with her family she fled her native country for the Netherlands. In 1999, she was able to visit Bosnia and the city of #Mostar again for the first time to witness the utter devastation - the war had left seventy percent of the buildings destroyed. This experience inspired Mačkić’s research to explore the emotional effects of war damage on a city’s inhabitants and the possibilities for rebuilding collective and inclusive identities through architecture.

    The book Mortal Cities and Forgotten Monuments tells a moving story of architecture and history. The first two parts of the book provide historical background on the war in Bosnia and its relationship to the built environment of the region. The final section demonstrates Mačkić’s ideas for architectural interventions, applying a new design language that goes beyond political, religious, or cultural interpretations - an openness that allows it avoid tensions and claims of truth without ignoring or denying the past. Using this as a foundation, she proposes designs for urban and public space that are simultaneously rooted in ancient traditions while looking toward the future.

    https://www.naibooksellers.nl/mortal-cities-and-forgotten-monuments-arna-mackic.html

    #livre #ruines #villes #urban_matter #géographie_urbaine #mémoire #guerre #Arna_Mackic #Mackic #Bosnie #architecture #identité #histoire

    via @cede

  • L’attractivité, un mythe de l’action publique territoriale
    https://metropolitiques.eu/L-attractivite-un-mythe-de-l-action-publique-territoriale.html

    Revenant sur plus de dix ans de recherches, Michel Grossetti bat en brèche les thèses suggérant que les villes auraient les moyens d’attirer à elles les entreprises « innovantes » et les travailleurs « créatifs » L’attractivité des territoires est devenue une préoccupation constante des élus et de ceux qui les conseillent, qu’ils soient en charge d’une ville, d’une région ou d’un pays. Il faut attirer des entreprises, des activités, des cadres, des entrepreneurs, des étudiants, bref, tout ce qui est censé #Essais

    / attractivité, #métropolisation, #mobilité_résidentielle, #développement

    #attractivité
    https://metropolitiques.eu/IMG/pdf/met_grossetti.pdf

    • L’erreur de beaucoup de raisonnements sur l’attractivité est de surestimer la mobilité géographique durable, celle qui amène une famille à s’installer dans une ville pour plusieurs années, ou une entreprise à créer un établissement important dans une agglomération où elle n’était pas présente auparavant. Il est indéniable que la mobilité de courte durée (professionnelle ou de loisirs) des personnes s’est accrue considérablement avec le développement des transports rapides (aériens ou ferroviaires), mais la mobilité durable a connu une progression bien moindre. Les créateurs d’entreprises ou ceux qui ont des professions « créatives » ont des familles, des réseaux, suivent des logiques sociales complexes qui sont très loin de faire ressembler leurs « choix de localisation » à la recherche d’un lieu de villégiature pour quelques jours. Les entreprises sont engagées dans des logiques économiques dans lesquelles la question de la localisation est souvent secondaire. Elles peuvent parfaitement entretenir des liens distants en organisant des courts séjours de leurs membres et en utilisant les moyens de communication actuels. Si elles considèrent devoir être présentes dans une agglomération pour accéder à des ressources particulières (des marchés le plus souvent, ou parfois certaines technologies), elles peuvent ouvrir des antennes légères et facilement réversibles. Pour les villes, il semblerait donc préférable de miser sur la formation de celles et ceux qui y vivent déjà, et sur l’élévation du niveau général des services urbains accessibles à tous, que d’espérer attirer des talents ou des richesses qu’elles seraient incapables de créer.

    • En fait, la mobilité résidentielle durable est affreusement couteuse et difficile à mettre en œuvre. Quand les membres du foyer ont tous trouvé leur activité, il n’est plus envisageable de bouger, tant il va être lent, couteux et hasardeux de recaser tout le monde ailleurs.
      Et le marché immobilier n’aide pas, particulièrement le locatif, complètement bloqué par la loi Boutin  : pour louer, il te faut un CDI confirmé et au moins 3 fois le montant du loyer en salaire. La première règle brise la mobilité professionnelle, la seconde bloque dans les 75% de la population locative là où elle logeait avant la loi. Les précaires n’ont plus du tout la possibilité d’aller vers un nouveau boulot, sauf à avoir une voiture et à kiffer d’y vivre dedans.

    • Ne pas sous-estimer le fait que des élus qui omettraient de vanter « l’attractivité de leur territoire » se verront privés de toutes les dotations de l’Etat, de ses agences, satellites divers, et de l’Europe, indispensables pour boucler leur budget, sauf à se voir placés sous la tutelle du Préfet... D’où l’importance de prendre en compte le mécano financier complexe qui accompagne le triomphe du néo-libéralisme le plus débridé, horizon, pour l’heure, indépassable de notre temps...

  • PLUS VITE QUE LE COEUR D’UN MORTEL

    Il vient de sortir, le bel ouvrage de Max Rousseau et Vincent Béal ! Un livre qui revient sur les effets de la #crise_économique sur les #villes à travers l’expérience américaine, mais aussi sur le vernis de la ville décroissante qui cache mal parfois les processus de #ségrégation à l’oeuvre. Le tout accompagné d’un travail de cartographie de David Lagarde et d’illustrations de Lauren Hamel !


    https://editionsgrevis.com/2021/11/02/plus-vite-que-le-coeur-dun-mortel
    #livre #USA #Etats-Unis #cartographie #déclin_urbain #géographie_urbaine #urban_matter #Cleveland #abandon

  • Prison N°5

    À travers le récit de son #emprisonnement en #Turquie, #Zehra_Dogan, journaliste et artiste, parle de l’histoire et de l’oppression du peuple kurde, mais aussi de solidarité et de résistance de toutes ces femmes enfermées.
    Ce livre est le fruit d’une détermination, transformant un emprisonnement en une résistance. Zehra Dogan, artiste kurde condamnée pour un dessin et une information qu’elle a relayés, fut jetée dans la prison n°5 de Diyarbakir, en Turquie. Elle nous immerge dans son quotidien carcéral. Découvrir le passé de ce haut lieu de persécutions et de résistances, c’est connaître la lutte du peuple kurde.

    https://www.editions-delcourt.fr/bd/series/serie-prison-n-5/album-prison-n-5
    #BD #bande_dessinée #livre

    #Kurdes #résistance #auto-gestion #syndrome_de_Nusaybin #Kurdistan_turc #guerre #violence #armée_turque #couvre-feu #destruction #Sur #massacres #Cizre #Silopi #villes #PKK #Öcalan #révolte_de_Dersim #révolte_de_Kocgiri #révolte_de_Koçgiri #Cheikh_Saïd #torture #terrorisme #Kenan_Evren #Esat_Oktay_Yildray #assimilation #quartier_35 #Osman_Aydin #résistance #uniforme #tenue_unique #Sakine_Causiz #impunité #discriminations #exil_forcé #IDPs #déplacées_internes #identité #langue #exploitation #enlèvements #enlèvements #Hasan_Ocak #Mères_du_Samedi #montagne #guérilla #Kurdistan #Mères_de_la_paix #paix #violences_policières #ring_bleu #prison_de_Tarse #enfants #femmes

    (BD très très dure, mais un document historique incroyable)

  • #Jeunes de quartier. Le pouvoir des #mots

    Qu’est-ce qu’être jeune dans un #quartier_populaire ? À quelle #expérience sociale, urbaine, familiale, à quelles #visions de sa place dans la société et dans le territoire cela renvoie-t-il ? Telles sont les questions qui ont guidé la #recherche_participative conduite dans dix villes ou quartiers de l’#Île-de-France. Avec un objectif : ne pas laisser les autres parler, mais choisir nos mots, les mots pour en débattre.



    À chacun·e maintenant de piocher, de sauter d’un mot ou d’un texte à l’autre, en s’inspirant ou non des connexions proposées entre les différentes notices, et de visionner les capsules vidéos.

    Nous vous souhaitons bon voyage.

    https://jeunesdequartier.fr

    Et un #livre :

    Jeunes de quartier. Le pouvoir des mots

    Qu’est-ce qu’être « jeune de quartier » ? À quelle expérience sociale, urbaine, familiale, à quelles visions de sa place dans la société et dans le territoire cela renvoie-t-il ?

    Ces questions sont au centre de cet ouvrage, fruit d’une recherche participative conduite dans dix villes ou quartiers de l’Île-de-France et associant 120 jeunes, une quinzaine de professionnels de la jeunesse et une quinzaine de chercheurs appartenant à différentes disciplines.

    La forme de l’#abécédaire, dans lequel les voix, diverses, de chacun.e entrent en discussion, permet de naviguer, à partir des mots, entre des territoires, des regards, des expériences, des points de vue. Les analyses proposées, en partant des acteurs concernés, contredisent souvent les #représentations de sens commun et en tout cas les complexifient.

    https://cfeditions.com/jdq

    #villes #RAP #quartiers #géographie_urbaine #études_urbaines #France #Paris #jeunesse

    ping @karine4 @cede

  • Les grands événements, olympiades de la sécurité urbaine numérique ?
    https://metropolitiques.eu/Les-grands-evenements-olympiades-de-la-securite-urbaine-numerique.ht

    Les grands événements internationaux sont de plus en plus les lieux de déploiement des politiques et des technologies de sécurité numérique, allant de la reconnaissance faciale aux systèmes anti-drones. Myrtille Picaud montre comment la Coupe du monde masculine de rugby de 2023 et les JO de 2024 vont accélérer leur développement. Après avoir organisé l’Euro masculin de football en 2016, la France accueillera lors du prochain mandat présidentiel deux grands événements sportifs : la Coupe du monde #Terrains

    / #Jeux_olympiques, sécurité, #technologie, #sport

    #sécurité
    https://metropolitiques.eu/IMG/pdf/met_picaud.pdf