Illinois Global Institute

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Welcome to the calendar of the Illinois Global Institute. We are home to 10 longstanding international area studies centers and thematic programs. Bringing the units together as part of the IGI will improve organizational support, raise visibility, and foster additional cross-campus collaboration on essential international programs

THE MAP WAS VERY DARK: Place, Knowledge, and Decoloniality in Planning Research

Event Type
Conference/Workshop
Sponsor
Center for Latin American and the Caribbean Studies
Location
Levis Center, Room 300
Date
Sep 26, 2024   5:00 - 6:30 pm  
Views
169
Originating Calendar
Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS)

The LAC Cities Collective is pleased to invite you to an insightful presentation by Dr. Bjørn Sletto, Professor of Community and Regional Planning at the University of Texas at Austin.

Event Description: Decolonizing planning research involves a thoughtful and respectful engagement with diverse ontological positions and epistemological perspectives. This presentation will explore how we can listen to the stories and memories that imbue places with meaning, while practicing critical reflexivity, reciprocity, and respect for self-determination. Bjørn Sletto will share experiences from research with Indigenous communities in Venezuela, informal settlement residents in the Dominican Republic, and environmental justice advocates in Austin, Texas. The discussion will highlight the complexities of navigating epistemological and ontological differences and the opportunities for co-production that arise from such trans-boundary, place-based research.

Time: 5pm-6:30pm

Date: Thursday, September 26th

Location: Levis Center, Room 300

We hope to see you there!

Bio: 

Bjørn Sletto is Professor of Community and Regional Planning at the University of Texas at Austin. His research interests include insurgent and decolonial planning, community-based research, and environmental justice. He has engaged in activist scholarship related to Indigenous territoriality and participatory mapping in Venezuelaurban informality in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; and community-based environmental justice work and park planning in Austin, Texas. His co-editor of Radical Cartographies: Participatory Mapmaking from Latin America (UT Press) and Decolonizing Planning: Power and Knowledge in the Informal City (Edward Elgar Publishing, forthcoming). 




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