The popular Science On Screen series returns to Santa Fe Wednesday evening, May 8, with Simon DeDeo and the 1992 cult hacker film Sneakers.
SFI's 2013 Community Lecture series debuted March 14 with UC-Boulder's Leysia Palen describing how victims, observers, and “citizen-responders” are using modern technology to participate in disaster response. Watch ...
Speaking at SFI yesterday, noted climate scientist James Hansen told an overflow crowd that efforts to stem climate change will be ineffectual as long as fossil fuels remain the cheapest ...
SFI's crowdfunding campaign has reached its goal. The resulting research will help scientists preserve the threatened landscapes on which indigenous human groups depend.
The 2012 Science On Screen series in Santa Fe wrapped up December 13 to a full house, with "The Gods Must Be Crazy" and Murray Gell-Mann's distinctive insight and ...
Seminar
June 10, 2013
12:15 PM
Collins Conference Room
Jan Nijman (Director, Center for Urban Studies, University of Amsterdam)
Abstract. Urban slums have proliferated throughout the developing world in cities of the so-called global south. In Mumbai, India, over half of the population of 12 million is now said to live in slums, a greater number in absolute and relative terms than ever before, despite a range of successive policies aimed at slum eradication or rehabilitation. Why do slums emerge and why (and how) do they persist or survive? What is the place or role of the slum in the wider urban environment?
Using Dharavi as an empirical case, it is argued that slums (in India) function according to a distinct logic and on the basis of an intricate social fabric that is interwoven with the local economy. The slum is subject to some government and external interference but it largely operates organically, as an unintended city. If the first question is how the slum works, the second question is how it relates to the urban system of which it is a part.
These problems have a fundamental spatial (and scalar) dimension but must simultaneously involve economic, political, and cultural aspects. The very notion of the slum itself, too, is inevitably problematized. The argumentation is in part based on extensive surveys of households and firms in Dharavi.
Purpose: Research Collaboration
SFI Host: Geoffrey West