"What is ours to do?" Connection during a pandemic's time of shelter-in-place

Mindy Thompson Fullilove, Lourdes J. Rodriguez, Robert Sember, Molly Rose Kaufman, Ayako Maruyama,Lesley Rennis, Douglas Farrand, Aubrey Murdock, Nupur Chaudhury, Jaden Thompson,Robert E. Fullilove

Urban Geography(2022)

引用 2|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
This paper describes a 2020 effort by the Cities Research Group of the University of Orange, United States, to create and pilot educational materials that could help organizations participate in collective recovery from the converging crises of the Covid-19 pandemic, racial oppression and climate change. Because of "shelter-in-place" strategies for reducing pandemic spread, the city as a site of human activity was fundamentally altered, undermining the "solid ground" the urban space had provided for collective life. Building on previous experience with mobilizing organizations for disaster recovery, the Cities Research Group launched, "What is ours to do?" an initiative centered on mobilizing organizations to stand in place of the public space and sphere and to enable recovery by serving as the "site of community and human connection" [Sorkin, Michael (1992a). Introduction: Variations on a theme park. In M. Sorkin (Ed.), Variations on a theme park: The New American city and the end of public space (pp. xi-xv). Hill & Wang]. "What is ours to do?" asks every organization to consider, in light of their original roles and obligations, how they might contribute to the people's needs for resources, justice and a sense of "solid ground." The assumption of organizational responsibility helps to provide these necessities for people in times when the ground has shifted, thereby lifting morale, saving lives and pointing the way to a just future.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Collective recovery, COVID-19, fracture-on-fracture, shelter-in-place
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要