You know things are getting out of control when the Times runs two full-width breaking news banners at the same time. It looks like a glitch, which tracks. A chaos double rainbow. A depressing Mike Breen ‘double bang.’
@rnisa
Geography and Architecture and History and Empire and Infrastructure and Prisons and he/him Program Lead, Sustainability in Carnegie Mellon University’s IDeATe Program. Affiliated faculty: CMU School of Architecture www.crisisofenclosure.com
You know things are getting out of control when the Times runs two full-width breaking news banners at the same time. It looks like a glitch, which tracks. A chaos double rainbow. A depressing Mike Breen ‘double bang.’
They don’t need a tool to assess where to drop a bomb when they have one that confidently confirms any location they choose. They don’t need autonomous drones to drop those bombs, they just need to give an order. So the human is just a conduit for the machine, which is just a conduit for the human.
Yeah this is all I’ve got too. This whole thing is so @stschrader1.bsky.social global police coded—another chapter in the “Is there actually a meaningful border between US law enforcement and US military operations?” story.
I’ve seen some references to the MDC in NY???
I truly hate social media—especially in a time like this—but popping up to ask if anyone knows where Maduro & wife will/are being held? Like civilian detention facility or military one?
Asking as a person finalizing a book about military detention.
#VELI2026 applications are open! Read the FAQ, register for an information session, then put together a team and apply! Here's to fostering intentional change rooted in shared values in #HigherEd.
#AcademicSky #EduSkyChat #EduSky
My Global Corridor newsletter #4 featuring stories, data, opinion + academic work from digital cables to Artic sea routes to private equity funds to AI supply chains....Out now
globalcorridor.substack.com/p/global-cor...
The Trump administration has unleashed a massive domestic surveillance apparatus, thanks to AI systems supplied by major tech firms
I wrote about its origins and impact on the ground for @dissentmag.bsky.social and the @theintercept.com
www.dissentmagazine.org/online_artic...
Hi! We just released three new pages. First up, we break down the devastating defunding of medical research in the US, including grant terminations and delays representing nearly $5B in funding losses, cuts to future funding, and attacks on training programs: unbreaking.org/issues/medic...
👋 Hi, we’re Unbreaking, a volunteer-run collective working to document our current moment of institutional collapse and its human costs—as well as the pushback and resilience work already underway. We believe this is critical work for building and retaining political agency.
New from my team: for the same volume of energy transition minerals it would take to make all of the Pentagon's non-combat vehicles into EVs, we could electrify the entire Postal Service, the entire Parks Service, and put battery backup on more than 7600 federal buildings. 🧵
I’m writing a book conclusion that’s also a tiptoe into a new research project, and this review is the first time in a long time that I’ve read something about automated war and realized my head was just nodding up and down the whole time. Thanks @emilymitchelleaton.bsky.social for the rec!
The fall of the house Usher…
Yup. Kinda excited this year.
Please share!
Call for topic editors, POEM
Is there a topic related to AI and algorithms; data and computation; or media and mis- and dis-information that you don't think is getting enough attention, or that you think is crucial for high schoolers and college students to learn about?
Good shouts! Thanks Kevin! Will you be in Detroit in the spring?
I’ll be teaching an ethics course to 4th year UG architecture students in the spring. The students will have had at least one design ethics courses already.
I’m wondering what y’all think are the topics/readings/cases that the field needs a more sustained engagement & deep reckoning with.
A squeaker.
But the Knicks are winning. For now.
To commemorate this article, I humbly provide this "graphical abstract" of the paper featuring El Risitas. Sound on.
youtu.be/NoJ6eNxHgNs
Hoping to meet some of you in person at the Annual Meeting. Be sure to mark your calendars and come to the Urban Geography Plenary with Dallas Rogers and Marina Karides on Friday the 19th at 1:20!!
Student Access Award Winners: Joseph Karanja, Arizona State University Qingren Chen, Durham University Kejin Wang, Louisiana State University Corgan Archuleta, Macalester College Sheng Xuan, Durham University Ang Liu, Rutgers University Xuan He, Chinese University of Hong Kong Weiying Lin, Texas A&M Aneika Perez, San Diego State University, University of California Santa Barbara Katie Brown, Michigan State University Austin Martin, Temple University Mehmet Eroğlu, Michigan State University
Alternative Modes of Scholarship Awards: James Barnes (Principal researcher & design/builder), The University of Virginia with Robin Xu (Architecture, The University of Virginia) and Addie Merlo (Industrial Design, James Madison University) "Tactical Growth: Socio-Ecological Investigations of Biodiversity-based Tactical Urbanism in a K-5 Schoolyard" Bryson Berry, Macalester College "Black Prosperity Through Afrofuturism: An Analysis of the Black/White Wealth Gap"
Graduate Student Paper Award: Amani Ponnaganti, University of Wisconsin-Madison “Submerged empire: Racial grammars of environmental governance in Houston, 1900-1939," and Dissertation Completion: Yudi Liu, Department of Urban Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, "National Railway Reform as a Critical Juncture: Institutional Establishment of Entrepreneurial Transit Metropolis Tokyo"
Grad Fellowship: Michael McCanless, University of Kentucky “Corporate Investors, Property Technologies, and Changing Dynamics in Property Tax," Aila Bandagi Kandlakunta, University of Nevada, Reno "Women on the Move: Gendered Mobility and the Right to the City in Hyderabad, India."
Really happy to announce this year’s winners of the
@geographers.bsky.social Urban Geography Specialty Group Awards! The board read so many excellent submissions and it was a joy to learn from all the exciting work being done by such a wide range of early career scholars.
Congratulations all!
Really happy to have this out: on occupations as reparative urban infrastructures, written with brilliant friend and collaborator Suraya Scheba: www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
This record has been spinning in my apartment all week. It’s really helped carry me through such an intense range of emotions—a gift in such awful awful times.
intlanthem.bandcamp.com/album/turbul...
And check out this related symposium in @antipodeonline edited by Charmaine Chua & @kaibosworth.bsky.social on blockades, circulation & struggle antipodeonline.org/2023/09/21/v...
Can you tell I’m just really really really thrilled that this is finally out in the world?
Oh! If you’re going to be at the American Studies Assn meeting, come to our panel and meet some of these amazing contributors!
Lastly, an academic journal is the manifestation ofso much supporting labor. Thanks to the people doing copyediting/layout @dukepress.bsky.social; Tom Harbison, Conor McGrady & the editorial collective @ Radical History Review; & especially thanks to Monica Kim for the firm/fair editorial brilliance
Considering the ongoing criminalization of mutual aid by reactionaries in the US, this conversation (& much of issue 147) conveys the radical nature of building abolitionist infrastructures of survival & “making do” in the face of ongoing expressions of police power.
This roundtable also touches on mutual aid & bridge building & considers what it means—and what it might look like in practice—to build infrastructures premised on the belief that everyone deserves care and no one is disposable.