Reconstructing yourself in a changing urban environment

Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

11 November 2008

Organizing Obama

The Department of Urban Studies and Planning had the pleasure to welcome Professor Marshall Ganz, Lecturer in Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, on Wednesday, November 5th, 2008 for a lunch discussion sponsored by the seminar series "Spaces of Contention and Competing Citizenships" and the Housing, Community and Economic Development group.

Ganz was once a National Organizing Director of the United Farm Workers and is now a sought-after advisor to political campaigns, unions and NGOs. In 1968, Marshall Ganz dropped out of Harvard to join the civil rights movement, returned to his hometown of Bakersfield, California with "Mississippi Eyes" and was able to see for the first time the poverty, racism and injustice that had been around him his whole life. He then joined Ceasar Chavez as a farm worker organizer and was mentored by figures from Saul Alinsky's community organizing movement. He also helped organize a Get Out the Vote campaign in the 1968 California Primary for Robert Kennedy.

Since January, 2007, Marshall Ganz has worked as one of the lead organizers of the Obama campaign, training youth and other campaign volunteers around the country working for the election of Barack Obama. His talk in DUSP (Department of Urban Studies and Planning at MIT), "Organizing Obama: Leadership, Story and Strategy", focused specifically on how this grassroot campaigning and organizing work drew committed and continued support from a variety of volunteers and political activists united around the values and stories that Barack Obama developed during his campaign and how the Obama team worked to put an end to political campaigning centered on marketing and advertising towards voters as passive consumers. The team's goal was to create a long-lasting sense of purpose, action, and commitment around the volunteers who worked relentlessly around each State of the country towards and beyond the election of Barack Obama.

23 September 2008

Tasteless America?

>> Une présentation du jury du concours House Redux face aux projets de la 'future maison blanche'. Malgré les ambitions tant attendues du concours, les propos du jury font preuve de peu d’enthousiasme. On y fait référence aux projets des années 60, aux images ré éditées depuis « plusieurs décennies », où ici l’imaginaire et l’utopie ne porteraient aucune volonté politique. Voit-on alors les limites du discours politique que doit susciter un rendu de projet architectural? Est-ce vraiment par le biais d’un concours que l’on pourrait exprimer synthétiquement l’acte politique de l’architecture ?

03 July 2008

Mobiliser Alinsky

"Situé au croisement de la tradition du « self-made man » et de l’autogestion à l’américaine, Saul Alinsky est la figure de proue d’un mouvement qui a profondément marqué l’histoire du progressisme aux États-Unis. Michael C. Behrent dresse ici le portrait du père fondateur du community organizing, dont l’histoire a inspiré aussi bien Hillary Clinton que Barack Obama."

>> Article complet sur La Vie des Idées.

09 March 2008

Crise et habitat

"Hausse des prix de l'immobilier, effets de la crise américaine, problème récurrent des sans-logis... : autant de questions d'actualité qui font l'objet de débats et de réflexions sur les actions à mener. Le dossier éclaire ces différents enjeux en présentant : des analyses des politiques françaises du logement des dernières décennies, et notamment en matière de logement social ; des points de vue des divers acteurs ; la législation et les évolutions les plus récentes de la politique gouvernementale. Une partie traite également de la situation à l'étranger, principalement au niveau européen, et permet de mesurer les similitudes ou les différences par rapport à d'autres pays."

Pour consulter ce rapport publié par la Documentation Française:
>> http://www.ladocumentationfrancaise.fr/catalogue/3303332109449/index.shtml

14 February 2008

Collective Housing


This is not an advertising, nor a reading note...but I am posting this information on this unconventional topic related to the culture of the red Russia: the communitarian housing. As I have not read the book but only the little summary you have on the image [on your left], I have been however very interested by the topic in relation to my interests towards the practices of community development and housing in the United States. Of course none of this imposed and applied collectivism of the housing conditions and production happened in the US as in Russia. But the dream of community at large in neighborhoods also reached a certain exclusion and norms without the political and ideological oppression lived by the Russians.
>> check the publishers: Editions du Sextant

16 January 2008

Power House

Et pourquoi ne pas repenser une des icônes du pouvoir des Etats-Unis alors que la figure présidentielle est en jeu ? La Maison Blanche avec son parc, ses parterres, ses colonnettes, sa symétrie pourrait-elle retrouver un autre visage ?

La galerie Storefront à New York ose poser ces questions et par la même l’image de l’architecture du pouvoir et du politique. A Washington, épicentre quasi sacré, l’architecture ne s’est pas détachée de son langage néo classique depuis sa création.


Rares sont les concours qui s’attaquent à de sujets aussi brûlants. Non pas qu’il y ait urgence à intervenir sur un tel projet mais que celui-ci serait en mesure de repenser, avec un humour plutôt acide, le futur politique et démocratique d’un pays qui souffre fortement d’idéal et de vision globale. Comment alors considérer en même temps les conditions d’une démocratie en perte de vitesse et les projections renouvelées d’un nouvel ordre ?

L’architecture nous le dira. [?]

A vous de jouer !

>> http://www.whitehouseredux.org/

14 May 2007

Deux visages du logement en France?

La France de propriétaires de M. Sarkozy et les logements sociaux de Mme Royal

Article publié le 03 Mai 2007 Source : LE MONDE.FR
par Bertrand Bissuel [Taille de l'article : 359 mots]

Extrait : "Durant le tête-à-tête télévisé entre Ségolène Royal et Nicolas Sarkozy, les questions touchant au logement ont été expédiées en quelques minutes. Les deux candidats ont concentré leur propos sur quelques-unes des priorités qui leur tiennent le plus à cœur. Sans surprise, M.Sarkozy a redit qu'il voulait "faire de la France un pays de propriétaires" tandis que Mme Royal, elle, a insisté sur la pénurie de logements sociaux, après avoir rappelé qu'il y avait "3,5 millions de mal-logés" en France. "

>> Cet extrait d'article nous fait rebondir sur les phénomènes que nous observons de part le monde où par exemple aux Etats-Unis, le programme HOPE VI depuis 1994 instaure une reconstruction/démolition de logements sociaux en réduisant le parc de logements sociaux disponibles en suivant une logique de marché tendant à la constitution d'une nation de propriétaires. Le cas du Mexique est en soit entre les deux propositions des candidats à la présidentielle : il permet grâce au financement d’une caisse de crédit appelée INFONAVIT de financer la production de logements sociaux accessibles à la propriété.

>> quelques images des opérations INFONAVIT d’après la revue d’architecture Arquine. [cette image est issue de notre ancien Blog ]

14 April 2007

17 new New Orleans?



March 30, 2007

New Orleans Proposes to Invest in 17 Areas
By ADAM NOSSITER

NEW ORLEANS, March 29 — New Orleans unveiled its latest redevelopment plan Thursday, choosing 17 zones where the city has decided to concentrate resources in order to stimulate investment and renewal.
The 17 development zones, each about a half-mile in diameter, are scattered throughout New Orleans. They vary from a devastated shopping plaza in the eastern section of the city, to blocks in the ruined Lower Ninth Ward and to areas not hard-hit by Hurricane Katrina but still in need of renewal, as officials put it, including the old St. Roch Market in the Bywater area.
The plan is at least the fourth such effort since the storm, and at about $1.1 billion, notably more modest than its predecessors.


Its modesty provided some hope that, unlike the other plans that have been shelved or are in limbo, the outline presented at City Hall by Mayor C. Ray Nagin and his recovery chief, Edward J. Blakely, may come to fruition in some form.
Indeed, Mr. Blakely, an academic and a recognized expert in disaster recovery, promised “cranes on the skyline” by September. But where exactly they will be, and what they will be doing, was unclear from Thursday’s summary presentation.
While the city that tourists know has regained much of its old life, many other areas that were blighted long before the storm or that have become lifeless since, have yet to come back.
The hope is that if these 17 limited areas are redeveloped, they will become catalysts for further development around them.
Under the plan, some of the public investment will be used as loans and unspecified “other incentives” to private developers, and some will be used for the development of public works like libraries and clinics.
A common historical thread is that the designated areas are “all centered on the old markets, on which the city was built in the first place,” Mr. Blakely said, referring to public market buildings like the St. Roch, that once were neighborhood hubs.
The bulk of the money will be used on citywide projects like park improvements and traffic lights.
Development in the 17 areas will be “driven by incentives and a market-driven approach,” Mr. Nagin said at a City Hall news conference. He has long maintained that the economic market will guide New Orleans’s recovery, a process that has been playing out in the 19 months since the hurricane, though not necessarily to the city’s advantage. Developers, for instance, have been fearful of making large-scale commitments in the absence of an authoritative plan, and former residents who lack resources to re-establish themselves have yet to return.
Finger-pointing, bitterness and unrealistic expectations have helped to dissolve previous planning exercises that have emanated in a flurry since the hurricane. One recent proposal called for spending $14 billion on a grab-bag of ideas, with no parts of the city, no matter how vulnerable or dangerous, excluded.
This latest concept, with its narrow geographical focus and limited budget, struck some planners as more realistic.
“It’s promising to see somebody who is giving us a program that’s based on a realistic assessment of potential resources,” said Janet Howard, president of the Bureau of Governmental Research, a nonprofit public-policy organization here.
Still, the money is not a sure thing. The biggest chunk, $324 million, depends on Congress’s agreeing to waive Louisiana’s share of federally financed disaster recovery projects. President Bush is against forgiving this 10 percent match, which is mandated under the law, but the idea of a waiver — as was provided to New York after the Sept. 11 attacks and to Florida after Hurricane Andrew — has strong support in Congress.
Another $260 million would come from bonds already approved by voters, and $300 million more would come from a new bond sale based on selling the city’s blighted-property holdings to developers.
“I expect by the end of the summer you’re going to see a lot of activity,” Mr. Nagin said Thursday — a promise citizens here have heard before.

26 February 2007

Opening...

Dear All,

This is the FIRST message of HABITACTION*.
HABITACTION is a blog on housing ready-made, urban knowledge making, and city makers.
It aims to be an open table for researchers and professionals in the fields of the social and human sciences like history and sociology, applied sciences and art, and is more specialized in urban planning and politics, architecture, and environmental issues.
HABITACTION will start as an open diary, collecting articles, information, from three main countries of interests: the United States, France and Mexico.

This blog has started from past experiences and ideas. Some other 'short' blogs have been already created : one on New Orleans and its reconstruction called Urbankatrina, and two on teaching experiences in Mexico, one at the Tec de Monterrey, Campus Guadalajara, called Paisaje Urbano and one at the Escuela Superior de Arquitectura while teaching a 'taller urbano' on a central neighborhood of Guadalajara.
HABITACTION will try to combine all those interests in one and will be related to my PhD in sociology at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, EHESS, in France and some related works in my professional activities.

HABITACTION opens its first post as an homage to l'Abbe Pierre, a french priest and activist working for the homeless and the poor. HABITACTION seeks also to dream and navigate through utopias, urban and social realm far from the ones described by the reality of the Abbe Pierre.

To illustrate this last idea I will link two short videos from the sixties available on the web site of the Institut National de l'Audiovisuel [in France]. They both explain the desires of HABITACTION seeking and balancing between real news and utopias.
- "Apres sept ans de silence", ORTF, 1962.
- "et voilà les shadoks", ORTF, 1968.



* A special thanks to Yasmine Abbas and her neo nomad platform who motivated me to create this blog.