Explores how spatial justice shapes equitable, empowering, and inclusive experiences
In an era increasingly defined by questions of equity and inclusion, Spatial (In) Justice: How Does It Manifest in the Built Environment? offers a vital, global interrogation of how architecture and planning impact the lived experiences of marginalized communities. Edited by Adnan Zillur Morshed, this timely volume brings together contributions from 30 leading thinkers and practitioners--architects, planners, scholars, and designers--who reflect on the ethical and philosophical responsibilities of those who shape space.
Rather than offering simplistic answers or prescriptive solutions, this book explores the complex and often contradictory ways justice is interpreted and enacted through space. The essays examine built projects from around the world to ask whether design can foster dignity, hope, and community empowerment--and how design education must evolve to foreground these values. The contributing authors grapple with the mechanisms through which spatial practices can exclude, disempower, or uplift, addressing topics ranging from justice in the city to the politics of community engagement. Throughout the book, the essays advance a critical pedagogy of design--one that scrutinizes how space organizes power and shapes human possibility.
A far-reaching examination of how built environments can either reinforce or resist social injustice, this innovative volume:
Investigating the intersection of infrastructure, social reform, and public space through a justice-centered framework, Spatial (In) Justice: How Does It Manifest in the Built Environment? is ideal for advanced undergraduate and graduate-level courses in architecture, urban design, city planning, urban sociology, and public health. It is well-suited for degree programs in architecture, urban studies, environmental design, social policy, and public administration.