For this issue of Future Anterior , we welcome papers that examine historical or contemporary retrofitting practices and theories in relation to climate crises and energy challenges....Retrofit, a theory of preservation practiced globally in accordance with diverse disciplines, politics, cultures and resources, is a crucial aspect of the world's low carbon past and future. The diversity of retrofit practices across time and space warrants decolonizing the concept of "theory" and democratizing consideration of its formation. We invite authors to thought leadership, by illuminating the ideas and projects of underrepresented practitioners or by exploring how and why certain works of design and development have become sites of disciplinary adoration and/or discursive attention. Together, these case studies of retrofit will shed light on the archive of preservation that motivates and mobilizes individuals, institutions and industries to invest, both financially and culturally, in smart growth and degrowth. We seek papers that fall into three categories-Retrofit's Roots, How "Other" Retrofits Measure Up, and Retrofitting Conservation, each described below. We are interested not only in research-based texts appropriate for academic peer review in multiple disciplines (historic preservation, conservation, architecture, landscape architecture, urban and regional planning, real estate development, community/economic development), but also project, policy, and program evaluations appropriate for peer review by practitioners in these fields. Scholarly texts of no more than 4000 words (including references and footnotes) will undergo double-blind, peer review. Although authors are invited to submit papers on people, places, and projects across the globe, all submissions must be written in (or translated into) English for consideration. Only papers submitted to Future.Anterior.Journal@gmail.com by the deadline-06/01/20-in the formatting described below will be reviewed for publication.
Fallon Aidoo to lead COVID-19 Working Group on Commercial Anchors of Majority-Minority Communities
The vulnerability and resilience of Main Streets in Majority-Minority Communities of NYC, Miami, New Orleans, Atlanta and Memphis are the focus of this COVID-19 Working Group for Public Health and Social Sciences Research. Our research is supported in part by a grant from a National Science Foundation-funded Social Science Extreme Events Research (SSEER) Network housed at the Natural Hazards Center at the University of Colorado Boulder. Additional support comes from universities (schools of planning, policy and public administration) and corporate partners in community and economic development.
Fallon Aidoo selected to join NextCity Vanguards
Vanguard is an annual experiential urban leadership gathering of the best and brightest, working to improve cities across sectors such as urban planning, community development, entrepreneurship, government, transportation, sustainability, design, art and media.
The TOD Partnership Launch
This spring, The TOD Partnership will be holding its first Open Meeting on the role that Main Streets organizations can (and should) play in Boston 2030 planning. Details to come!