Bridging Theory and Practice Since 1974

Tag: 2022

Volume 49 Call for Papers

By Carolina Planning Journal

EVERYDAY LIFE AND THE POLITICS OF PLACE

“The way we think about space matters. It inflects our understandings of the world, our attitudes to others, our politics.”
—Doreen Massey

During the COVID-19 lockdowns, the importance of space, place, and daily experiences in our lives resurfaced. In Volume 49 of the Carolina Planning Journal, we want to reflect on the meaning, politics, and experiences of space, place, and everyday life. We will explore questions such as: How do we produce space? What values shape the production of space? Who produces space? Who has the right to the city or a specific space?  How have social movements worldwide created alternative spaces? What role do our disciplines play in these considerations?

This debate has been explored in the fields of urban planning, geography, cultural theory, sociology, architecture, and anthropology, among others. It allows us to imagine space beyond a two-dimensional, empty backdrop solely for building structures.  Instead, space is social and political, it is a living relationship with nature and each other, and it is a place for community and festivity. By examining our conception of space, we can question how capitalism, colonialism, racism, globalization, and more have diminished our relationship with space and one another.


Students, professionals, and researchers from a range of disciplines are invited to submit proposals that explore the production of space across the world. We invite creative approaches to the topic shared through written pieces, media, or a mix of the two.

Example topics include, but are not restricted to:

  • EVERYDAY LIFE, and how we can imagine and produce new possibilities for resistance and political change in the triviality of daily life.
  • SENSE AND POLITICS OF PLACE, and the influence globalization has had in places and our sense of place.
  • URBAN REVOLUTION, and the role of urbanism in shaping society. What is our relationship with each other and with nature? How can we reshape urbanization?
  • RIGHTS TO THE CITY as to who has the right to claim space, including issues related to informal economies, housing justice, immigrant communities, and other relevant factors.
  • THIRD SPACES, and how American society often lacks a space that is not work or home. How can we fill the void that capitalism creates, and how do we produce these alternatives?

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

By September 15, 2023, interested authors should submit a 2-page proposal. Proposals should include a title, a description of the proposed topic and its significance, a brief summary of the literature or landscape (if appropriate), and a preliminary list of references (not counted toward the page limit). Final papers typically do not exceed 3,000 words. Submit proposals and questions to  CarolinaPlanningJournal@gmail.com.

By October 15, 2023, Carolina Planning Journal will notify authors regarding their proposals. Authors will submit the <3,000-word draft by December along with a short biography, an abstract, and any relevant graphics. Editors will work with authors on drafts over the winter.

The Journal will be published at the end of Spring 2024. Carolina Planning Journal reserves the right to edit articles accepted for publication, subject to the author’s approval, for length, style, and content considerations.


Please submit proposals and questions to CarolinaPlanningJournal@gmail.com


Introducing Our New Editors for 2023

The Carolina Planning Journal (CPJ) and ∆NGLES are excited to announce the editors for the 2023-2024 school year: Candela Cerpa and Kathryn Cunningham. Read on to learn more about them.


CANDELA CERPA | Editor-in-Chief, Carolina Planning Journal

Candela Cerpa is a second-year master’s student in the Department of City and Regional Planning at UNC-Chapel Hill. She is interested in equitable disaster planning, particularly around floods. Born and raised in Uruguay, she received her bachelor of science in Environmental Science and Policy from the University of Maryland, College Park. Outside of work and school, she enjoys cooking and eating good food, listening to audiobooks, and organizing around climate and social issues.

KATHRYN CUNNINGHAM | Managing Editor, Angles

Kathryn Cunningham is a second-year master’s student with the Department of City and Regional Planning whose interests include climate change adaptation, parks, and public space. She studied Environmental Studies at Williams College and before coming to graduate school, she was in the San Francisco Bay Area managing sustainability projects for a law school. When not in class, she enjoys reading, running, and checking out all of the many concert venues the Research Triangle has to offer.


Please join us in giving a huge thank you and congratulations to our outgoing editors Lance Gloss and Jo (Joungwon) Kwon! Lance has graduated with a Master of City and Regional Planning. Jo will be in her fifth year of her Ph.D. and will continue to be a part of CPJ in the 2023-2024 school year. Read on for reflections from the two editors.

I have loved serving the CPJ as Editor-in-Chief for the past year. So many minds came together to deliver this volume of the Journal; helping to guide that process was serious fun. Our writers delivered thought-provoking research and earned the fruits of building relationships with their editors. Our editors, too, were persistent and thoughtful, and all grew tremendously. Jo Kwon did an absolutely brilliant job managing Angles, leveling up the blog by all accounts. The staff at DCRP were there every step of the way to help connect the dots on logistics. Now, I know we are leaving the CPJ in excellent hands with Candela Cerpa and Kathryn Cunningham. As we go to print, I’m excited to hear from the rest of our team–that’s all of you, our readers–with your responses to the ideas the CPJ presents in Volume 48.

It was truly a pleasure to serve as the Managing Editor for Angles this past year. Working with such a talented and passionate group of individuals was an incredible experience. One of the things I loved most about my role as ME was the opportunity to work with such a diverse range of authors and editors. We had a diverse group of people, including seasoned professionals and up-and-coming students, working together to produce high-quality content that reflected a range of perspectives. As I step back, I’m confident Angles will continue to thrive under new leadership. Thank you for a memorable experience, and I look forward to supporting the journal and blog in 2023-2024.


Post by Kathryn Cunningham, Angles Managing Editor

Volume 48 Call for Papers

By Carolina Planning Journal

URBAN ANALYTICS: CAPABILITIES AND CRITIQUES

In a world where we all will be living in some form of city by the end of this century, a new city science and a new urban analytics is of increasing relevance.”

—Michael Batty

“Will we be able to invent different modes of measuring that might open up the possibility of a different aesthetics, a different politics of inhabiting the Earth, of repairing and sharing the planet?”

—Achille Mbembe

Our cities are now wired together by technologies that produce vast troves of data. The reach of the internet and the ubiquity of digital devices have been matched by the growth of a computational toolset for analyzing these newly-available data. This presents a compelling opportunity for planners, who have always applied data to decision-making. Planners now apply robust analytical methods to address community problems with greater precision and reach.

These new tools permit a clearer picture of the urban world. They may enable new efficiencies in the delivery of urban services. Like all technologies, however, these tools present risks. Bias enters analytics in ways that are difficult to trace. Concerns arise over privacy and surveillance. Widespread reliance on these technologies has already demonstrated threats to democratic processes.

In Volume 48 of the Carolina Planning Journal, we pause to assess the moment. What should we make of this wealth of data? Perhaps it will lead us into a new era of technocratic decision-making and revive conflicts over the right to the city. Or perhaps democratized access to these tools will help communities resolve longstanding conflicts over urban governance.

What longed-for outcomes will be made possible? How will the perils be managed?


Students, professionals, and researchers from a range of disciplines are invited to submit abstracts that explore the application of data analytics to urban governance and the design of cities. Suggested topics include (but are not restricted to):

  • ENERGY, such as the real-time monitoring of energy grids and power consumption.
  • PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT, such as the use of data visualization in community processes.
  • TRANSPORTATION, such as the live tracking of public transit use.
  • ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, such as the expansion of decentralized digital currencies.
  • HOUSING, such as the automated review of public housing applications.
  • ENVIRONMENT, such as the pursuit of sustainable value chains.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
By August 12, 2022, interested authors should submit a two-page proposal. Proposals should include a title, description of the proposed topic and its significance, a brief summary of the literature or landscape, and a preliminary list of references (not counted toward the two-page limit). Final papers typically do not exceed 3,000 words. Submit proposals and questions to CarolinaPlanningJournal@gmail.com.

By September 16, 2022, Carolina Planning Journal will notify authors regarding their proposals. Drafts of full papers will be due by December and editors will work with authors on drafts of their papers over the course of the winter. The print version of the Journal will be published in the Spring of 2023. Carolina Planning Journal reserves the right to edit articles accepted for publication, subject to the author’s approval, for length, style, and content considerations.


Please submit proposals and questions to CarolinaPlanningJournal@gmail.com


Introducing Our New Editors for 2022

The Carolina Planning Journal (CPJ) and ∆NGLES are excited to announce the editors for the 2022-2023 school year: Lance Gloss and Joungwon Kwon. Read on to learn more about them.


LANCE GLOSS | Editor-in-Chief, Carolina Planning Journal

Lance is a second-generation urban planner with a passion for economic development strategies that center natural resource conservation and community uplift. He served as Managing Editor of the Urban Journal at Brown University, Section Editor at the College Hill Independent, and Senior Planner for the City of Grand Junction. Hailing from sunny Colorado, he earned his BA in Urban Studies at Brown and will earn his Master in City and Regional Planning at UNC-Chapel Hill in 2023. Outside of work, he can be found on his bicycle, in the woods, or on the rugby pitch.

JOUNGWON KWON | Managing Editor, Angles

Jo (Joungwon) Kwon is a fourth-year Ph.D. student in the Department of City and Regional Planning. She is interested in using visuals in plans, specifically in environmental planning. She has been a part of CPJ since 2019. With a background in Statistics and English Literature, she received her M.A. in Computational Media at Duke University. In her free time, she enjoys watching indie films, going to live performances, and drinking good coffee. This summer Jo will be working on her proposal on the role of visuals in planning.


Please join us in giving a huge thank you and congratulations to our outgoing editors Pierce Holloway and Emma Vinella-Brusher! Pierce has graduated with a Master of City and Regional Planning. Emma will be in her third year and will continue to be a part of CPJ in Fall 2022. Read on for reflections from the two editors.

I had the pleasure of serving as the Editor-in-Chief for the previous year which was a great education on the art of coordination. It was an exciting role to fill, paralleling the return to campus for our department as well as UNC. I learned how to be a better communicator and project manager from the myriad of authors and editors I worked with. My role allowed me to learn just how many moving parts are required to take a journal from an idea to a fully-fledged published journal you can hold in your hands. A massive thank you goes out to all the students, authors, and departmental staff that offered their time to make this year’s journal a success! I will continue to be thankful for the experience and look forward to seeing how the journal evolves with each year’s cohorts.

This past year was another busy one for the Carolina Angles blog. As Managing Editor, I was lucky enough to work with over a dozen talented authors, editors, and content creators to showcase the incredible work happening at both UNC and within the broader planning community. From the impact of tech on housing affordability, to the history of Durham’s queer bars, to the role structural racism plays in food access, Angles explored the challenges and opportunities within the field of planning from a variety of perspectives. I am so grateful for this experience, and am looking forward to taking a step back from my leadership role this coming year while continuing to support both the print journal and online blog. CPJ is in great hands with the rising leadership team, and I’m so excited to watch the journal and blog continue to grow!


Post by Jo Kwon, Angles Managing Editor