Paula Horrigan is an Emerita Professor of Landscape Architecture (Cornell University, USA) working to advance democratic placemaking and the public purposes of design and higher education through community-engaged education and scholarship. She is co-editor of Service-Learning in Design and Planning: Educating at the Boundaries (2011), Community Matters: Service-Learning in Engaged Design and Planning (2014) and a forthcoming book, with Thomas Oles, entitled Fieldwork in Landscape Architecture: Methods Actions Tools (Routledge 2022). As a visual artist she also makes visual books and works conveying the dynamic experiential, spatial and temporal qualities of landscapes. Phone: 607-351-2760 Address: PO Box 907 Clarkdale, AZ 86324
... Page 6. SUNY Series in Environmental and Architectural Phenomenology David Seamon, Editor Pag... more ... Page 6. SUNY Series in Environmental and Architectural Phenomenology David Seamon, Editor Page 7. DWELLING, SEEING, AND DESIGNING TOWARD A PHENOMENOLOGICAL ECOLOGY Edited by David Seamon State University of New York Press Page 8. ...
published annually, consist of papers on landscape architecture subject areas. Each issue is a co... more published annually, consist of papers on landscape architecture subject areas. Each issue is a collection of papers presented at the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture annual conference of that year. Conference theme is expressed as the subtitle of Landscape Research Record. The views expressed in papers published in Landscape Research Record are those of the authors and do
often, making sense of a number of presentations is left to the individual or the presentations a... more often, making sense of a number of presentations is left to the individual or the presentations are summarized at the end of the conference (when attendance and intellectual carrying capacity have dwindled significantly). Presenting overviews initially and roundups following the sessions worked well. By attending a broadly based conference such as the SRM over the years, I have had the opportunity to see the flow and meandering of research activity dealing primarily with natural resource management. A conference of this size and scope is a collection of hundreds of individual papers--thousands over the last decade--representing a significant amount of the knowledge generated within many fields related to natural resources. When the symposia are seen as a whole over time (independent of geographical and sponsor influences for a given symposium), subtle yet characteristic themes can be generally inferred. These themes are particularly evident, perhaps because of the biennial nature of the gathering. Attending SRM every two years has provided me a perspective of something quite familiar yet certainly evolving and often reflecting the fashionable or at least topical themes of the day. The last symposium, held in 1992 in Madison, Wisconsin, seemed to be characterized by biological and physical resource issues such as ecological and wildlife resource policy, management, and planning, to name a few. In contrast, the fifth SRM clearly reflected a shift toward human-based resource management issues, albeit using much of the ecological jargon currently in vogue. It remains to be seen whether the pronounced emphasis on the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum and its successors, experience-based management practices and the like, suggests a significant long-term shift in resource management directions or simply current funding for research. What is encouraging, however, is that whatever the trend the overall quality of the work presented at these symposia remains consistently high. After three full days of concurrent sessions, the close of the symposium featured a plenary address given by Charles R.Jordan, director of the Bureau of Parks and Recreation, City of Portland.Jordan spoke on "Multicultural Diversity and Land Management: A Difficult Challenge."Jordan has a reputation for delivering an inspirational message, and he did. Speaking about the necessity of providing recreational opportunities for a diverse population, he called for the inclusion of all people in the decisionmaking process, something hard not to agree with and perhaps a fitting finale to a conference featuring "partnerships" in its title. Two years ago, in my review of the fourth SRM for this journal I noted that these symposia offer a rare opportunity for academics and professionals from many disciplines to exchange information and more importantly to share world views. Most conferences are specialized because specialization of information is often equated with current knowledge and depth. The SRM, I believe, is unique in that, rather than being broad in content and shallow in substance, it is the very broadness of content that makes this conference relevant and worthwhile. The SRM manages to excel as a conference because it is directed at understanding one of the broadest issues possible-the relationship between society and natural resources. No single discipline could possibly cover so much ground. Rather than being devoted to extending knowledge in a clearly defined and bounded subset of the whole, the SRM has by choice or accident come the closest to a multidisciplinary gathering that I am aware of. The multiplicity of expertise and diversity of viewpoints that participants bring to the SRM has in turn led to connections being formed among people from a variety of disciplines. For this reason alone, although there are many reasons, attending the next SRM should be considered by anyone reading this journal. For details on obtaining a book of the fifth symposium abstracts for $15, call Jennifer Pate at (303) 4917729. The next SRM will be held in 1996 at Pennsylvania State University in College Station, Pennsylvania. Nathan Perkins is an Assistant Professor in the School of Landscape Architecture at the University of Guelph and director of the Landscape Research Group at Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1, Canada.
Partnerships : A Journal of Service-Learning and Civic Engagement, 2015
Rust to Green (R2G) is a civic engagement project with the transformative agenda of catalyzing co... more Rust to Green (R2G) is a civic engagement project with the transformative agenda of catalyzing community-driven placemaking in Upstate New York cities endeavoring to transition from post-industrial “rust” to “green” resiliency. At its core, R2G engages university and community partners in co-producing actionable projects that contribute to increasing the quality and health of places and the people who engage with and inhabit them. Guided by the theories and practices of placemaking and democratic civic engagement, R2G is first and foremost rooted in place and for the past five years that place has been the city of Utica, NY. This paper frames R2G’s praxis as being grounded in placemaking, and through examples of R2G in action, illustrates how it is aspiring to achieve the hallmarks of democratic civic engagement (Saltmarsh, Hartley, Clayton, 2009). It situates R2G as part of a movement toward democratic civic engagement in landscape architecture and planning and elaborates on R2G’s ...
Understanding Sustainability and Resilience In examining urban areas and their futures, resilienc... more Understanding Sustainability and Resilience In examining urban areas and their futures, resilience and sustainability can be seen as interdependent concepts. Sustainability is often described as a normative concept regarding intergenerational equity and balanced development that meets the social, ecological, and environmental needs of the present without impeding the needs of the future. A framework of sustainability discourages myopia in planning by considering the social and ecological demands within and outside of the boundaries of the system of interest, both now and in the future. Resilience, on the other hand, can be understood as the ability of a system to absorb shocks and reorganize in the face of a disturbance so to maintain its essential structure, function, and identity. The resilience paradigm conceives social-ecological systems as complex adaptive systems. Uncertainty and change are essential features of systems to be embraced rather than prevented. While resilience ha...
Service-learning, community engagement, community partnerships; these are all concepts that have ... more Service-learning, community engagement, community partnerships; these are all concepts that have become a part of the lexicon in higher education institutions. Service-learning is a growing part of the curriculum but the question is how do we make it work and make it count. This book is a collection of case studies of service-learning programs in design, architecture and planning. The chapters examine the different ways in which these concepts are being implemented in a number of institutions. According to the co-editors, the “critical question for us is how to deal with the boundaries that separate community and university as well as the boundaries of class, race, gender, age and all the others in service-learning programs” (p. 3). The authors use case studies to provide analysis, reflection and discussion of how programs have responded to these questions.
... Page 6. SUNY Series in Environmental and Architectural Phenomenology David Seamon, Editor Pag... more ... Page 6. SUNY Series in Environmental and Architectural Phenomenology David Seamon, Editor Page 7. DWELLING, SEEING, AND DESIGNING TOWARD A PHENOMENOLOGICAL ECOLOGY Edited by David Seamon State University of New York Press Page 8. ...
published annually, consist of papers on landscape architecture subject areas. Each issue is a co... more published annually, consist of papers on landscape architecture subject areas. Each issue is a collection of papers presented at the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture annual conference of that year. Conference theme is expressed as the subtitle of Landscape Research Record. The views expressed in papers published in Landscape Research Record are those of the authors and do
often, making sense of a number of presentations is left to the individual or the presentations a... more often, making sense of a number of presentations is left to the individual or the presentations are summarized at the end of the conference (when attendance and intellectual carrying capacity have dwindled significantly). Presenting overviews initially and roundups following the sessions worked well. By attending a broadly based conference such as the SRM over the years, I have had the opportunity to see the flow and meandering of research activity dealing primarily with natural resource management. A conference of this size and scope is a collection of hundreds of individual papers--thousands over the last decade--representing a significant amount of the knowledge generated within many fields related to natural resources. When the symposia are seen as a whole over time (independent of geographical and sponsor influences for a given symposium), subtle yet characteristic themes can be generally inferred. These themes are particularly evident, perhaps because of the biennial nature of the gathering. Attending SRM every two years has provided me a perspective of something quite familiar yet certainly evolving and often reflecting the fashionable or at least topical themes of the day. The last symposium, held in 1992 in Madison, Wisconsin, seemed to be characterized by biological and physical resource issues such as ecological and wildlife resource policy, management, and planning, to name a few. In contrast, the fifth SRM clearly reflected a shift toward human-based resource management issues, albeit using much of the ecological jargon currently in vogue. It remains to be seen whether the pronounced emphasis on the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum and its successors, experience-based management practices and the like, suggests a significant long-term shift in resource management directions or simply current funding for research. What is encouraging, however, is that whatever the trend the overall quality of the work presented at these symposia remains consistently high. After three full days of concurrent sessions, the close of the symposium featured a plenary address given by Charles R.Jordan, director of the Bureau of Parks and Recreation, City of Portland.Jordan spoke on "Multicultural Diversity and Land Management: A Difficult Challenge."Jordan has a reputation for delivering an inspirational message, and he did. Speaking about the necessity of providing recreational opportunities for a diverse population, he called for the inclusion of all people in the decisionmaking process, something hard not to agree with and perhaps a fitting finale to a conference featuring "partnerships" in its title. Two years ago, in my review of the fourth SRM for this journal I noted that these symposia offer a rare opportunity for academics and professionals from many disciplines to exchange information and more importantly to share world views. Most conferences are specialized because specialization of information is often equated with current knowledge and depth. The SRM, I believe, is unique in that, rather than being broad in content and shallow in substance, it is the very broadness of content that makes this conference relevant and worthwhile. The SRM manages to excel as a conference because it is directed at understanding one of the broadest issues possible-the relationship between society and natural resources. No single discipline could possibly cover so much ground. Rather than being devoted to extending knowledge in a clearly defined and bounded subset of the whole, the SRM has by choice or accident come the closest to a multidisciplinary gathering that I am aware of. The multiplicity of expertise and diversity of viewpoints that participants bring to the SRM has in turn led to connections being formed among people from a variety of disciplines. For this reason alone, although there are many reasons, attending the next SRM should be considered by anyone reading this journal. For details on obtaining a book of the fifth symposium abstracts for $15, call Jennifer Pate at (303) 4917729. The next SRM will be held in 1996 at Pennsylvania State University in College Station, Pennsylvania. Nathan Perkins is an Assistant Professor in the School of Landscape Architecture at the University of Guelph and director of the Landscape Research Group at Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1, Canada.
Partnerships : A Journal of Service-Learning and Civic Engagement, 2015
Rust to Green (R2G) is a civic engagement project with the transformative agenda of catalyzing co... more Rust to Green (R2G) is a civic engagement project with the transformative agenda of catalyzing community-driven placemaking in Upstate New York cities endeavoring to transition from post-industrial “rust” to “green” resiliency. At its core, R2G engages university and community partners in co-producing actionable projects that contribute to increasing the quality and health of places and the people who engage with and inhabit them. Guided by the theories and practices of placemaking and democratic civic engagement, R2G is first and foremost rooted in place and for the past five years that place has been the city of Utica, NY. This paper frames R2G’s praxis as being grounded in placemaking, and through examples of R2G in action, illustrates how it is aspiring to achieve the hallmarks of democratic civic engagement (Saltmarsh, Hartley, Clayton, 2009). It situates R2G as part of a movement toward democratic civic engagement in landscape architecture and planning and elaborates on R2G’s ...
Understanding Sustainability and Resilience In examining urban areas and their futures, resilienc... more Understanding Sustainability and Resilience In examining urban areas and their futures, resilience and sustainability can be seen as interdependent concepts. Sustainability is often described as a normative concept regarding intergenerational equity and balanced development that meets the social, ecological, and environmental needs of the present without impeding the needs of the future. A framework of sustainability discourages myopia in planning by considering the social and ecological demands within and outside of the boundaries of the system of interest, both now and in the future. Resilience, on the other hand, can be understood as the ability of a system to absorb shocks and reorganize in the face of a disturbance so to maintain its essential structure, function, and identity. The resilience paradigm conceives social-ecological systems as complex adaptive systems. Uncertainty and change are essential features of systems to be embraced rather than prevented. While resilience ha...
Service-learning, community engagement, community partnerships; these are all concepts that have ... more Service-learning, community engagement, community partnerships; these are all concepts that have become a part of the lexicon in higher education institutions. Service-learning is a growing part of the curriculum but the question is how do we make it work and make it count. This book is a collection of case studies of service-learning programs in design, architecture and planning. The chapters examine the different ways in which these concepts are being implemented in a number of institutions. According to the co-editors, the “critical question for us is how to deal with the boundaries that separate community and university as well as the boundaries of class, race, gender, age and all the others in service-learning programs” (p. 3). The authors use case studies to provide analysis, reflection and discussion of how programs have responded to these questions.
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Papers by Paula Horrigan