Thursday
1 Jun
Archived Event

Should we prepare (for) an urban exodus ?

The Copenhagen Landscape Lectures is a public lecture series for everyone who is interested in how we shape our physical environment, across cities and landscapes, education and practice.

Joel Sternfeld, from American Prospects, 1978

Are cities and metropolises the manifest destiny of humankind? The present environmental predicament might well lead us to question this idea, and to encourage something like an urban exodus.

Meet Sébastien Marot, Professor in environmental history, ENSAVT Université Paris-Est, and guest professor EPF Lausanne. Author of several books including Taking the Country’s Side: Agriculture and Architecture, Poligrafa, Barcelone 2019

This event is a collaboration with Copenhagen Landscape Lecture (CLL) and Institut français Danemark.

Your CAFx Community Membership
Name
fname lname
Member since
sign-up
Active
No Annual events at this time.
You can access previous annual events archive here
More Events
View all
Conversation
15 Apr
15 Apr
Panel Discussion: Behind “Tales of a Nomadic City”
Join us for a panel discussion delving deeper into the research, ideas and knowledge behind Tales of a Nomadic City.
Panel Discussion: Behind “Tales of a Nomadic City”
Workshop
16 Apr
16 Apr
Inventing Democratic Invitations — Approaches to Democratic Youth Engagement
Join us for a day of workshops and talks with local and international speakers - exploring how practices of making can be part of policy-making-processes and asking how citizens’ assemblies can act as democratic rupture that gives meaning to agencies otherwise overheard and shift attention from discursive to material and spatial practices?
Inventing Democratic Invitations — Approaches to Democratic Youth Engagement
Conversation
16 Apr
16 Apr
Mattering Democratic Commons — On Making Relational Politics with Spatial Practice
In the Roundtable each participant presents 10 minutes on a specific project and then we proceed to have a conversation about participant work and the work produced in the workshop.
Mattering Democratic Commons — On Making Relational Politics with Spatial Practice