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Threading the interdisciplinary needle: Advancing your work across fields while maintaining your home base
Read More: Threading the interdisciplinary needle: Advancing your work across fields while maintaining your home baseGlobal Metropolitan Studies and the Social Science Matrix are please to invite you to a panel discussion ’Threading the interdisciplinary needle: Advancing your work across fields while maintaining your home base’ Panelists: Marta Gonzalez (Civil Engineering and City & Regional Planning), Brandi Summers and Desiree Fields (both Geography) Thursday 28 October 330pm-430pm […]
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GMS Fall 2021 Open House
Read More: GMS Fall 2021 Open HouseThe Fall 2021 GMS Open House will be held in the Social Sciences Matrix (8th floor of the Social Sciences Building) on Tuesday, October 14, at 4:00 pm. Please share this information with any prospective DE students. We look forward to finally reconnecting in person with faculty and with both returning and prospective students. We […]
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Critical Infrastructure Under Stress
Read More: Critical Infrastructure Under StressPre-Registration Required by October 6: register here. Co-Sponsored by the Social Sciences Matrix The Center for Global Metropolitan Studies and the Social Science Matrix are pleased to invite you to participate in our campus-wide, interdisciplinary research initiative on “Critical Infrastructure Under Stress.” The objective of the year-long series of events is to build connections across disciplines […]
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The Berkeley Urban Rivers Symposium
Read More: The Berkeley Urban Rivers SymposiumThis symposium begins with a keynote talk on ‘Restoring ecological processes in an urban river: the Isar in Munich’, presented by Dr Aude Zingraff-Hamed (Technical University of Munich). The Isar demonstrates how an important urban river can be restored to yield ecological and social benefits. Next are graduate student research projects on riparian vegetation along […]
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Deborah Cowen | Abolition Infrastructures, Alimentary Infrastructures
Read More: Deborah Cowen | Abolition Infrastructures, Alimentary InfrastructuresRegister here for the talk on zoom. It has been widely asserted that abolition is not simply the dismantling of police, but the building of spaces and futures organized by its alternatives. There is arguably no better way to see this, and to hold Ruthie Gilmore’s call to ‘change everything’, than through engagement with […]
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Olalekan Jeyifous | The Apocryphal Gospel of Oakland: (Im)permanence, Improvisation, and Our Absurdist Future
Read More: Olalekan Jeyifous | The Apocryphal Gospel of Oakland: (Im)permanence, Improvisation, and Our Absurdist FutureVideo recording available A discussion between artist, Olalekan Jeyifous and UC Berkeley assistant professor of Geography, Dr. Brandi T. Summers on the generative power of collaboration and the potential for speculative architecture as a means to develop comprehensive constructions of urban Utopias/Dystopias that engage with a variety of social, political, and environmental realities. […]
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From a Comparative Gesture to Structured Comparison: How China and India Govern their Cities
Read More: From a Comparative Gesture to Structured Comparison: How China and India Govern their CitiesThe field of global urban studies has seen renewed interest in comparisons. A “comparative gesture,” advocated by urban geographers such as Jennifer Robinson and others, has been influential in urban studies in the last decade. In this talk, Xuefei Ren discusses how urban studies can make a leap from a “comparative gesture” to theoretically engaged […]
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Karen Smilowitz | Modeling access and equity in the design of school districts and related transportation decisions
Read More: Karen Smilowitz | Modeling access and equity in the design of school districts and related transportation decisionsRegister for the Zoom Webinar at the following link: https://berkeley.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUtf-GoqT0jGNOqYFL4YmJBb8oGVmPsqGaX Co-Sponsored by the Institute for Transportation Studies Operations research methods have been used to identify and evaluate solutions to the reconfiguration of public school attendance area boundaries for over fifty years. In broad terms, the school redistricting problem seeks to find capacity-feasible assignments of students […]
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Patricie Uwase | What civil engineers and planners should know about building infrastructure in the real world: Lessons from Rwanda
Read More: Patricie Uwase | What civil engineers and planners should know about building infrastructure in the real world: Lessons from RwandaVideo recording available! Over 25 years ago, Rwanda was almost on the brink of being wiped off the world map. Rwanda had just gone through one of the twentieth century’s worst genocides: the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi. This tragedy left the country’s infrastructure completely destroyed. Everything had to be built from scratch. Yet […]
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GMS Designated Emphasis Open House
Read More: GMS Designated Emphasis Open HousePlease join us for the Fall 2020 Virtual Open House for DE students, faculty, and anyone interested in joining the DE! Come to learn about the GMS Designated Emphasis (DE, a PhD minor), play urban-themed pictionary, and meet with core faculty, faculty affiliates, and other DE students. We will also share funding opportunities through the […]