Articles in Referred Journals by Gerardo Sandoval
Planning Theory & Practice , 2018
Papers by Gerardo Sandoval
Accessed November 30, 2015]. Smith, N. (2002) New Globalism, New Urbanism: Gentrification as Glob... more Accessed November 30, 2015]. Smith, N. (2002) New Globalism, New Urbanism: Gentrification as Global Urban Strategy. Antipode, 34(3), pp.427–450. Stehlin, J. (2015) Cycles of Investment: Bicycle Infrastructure, Gentrification, and the Restructuring of the San Francisco Bay Area. Environment and Planning A, 47(1),
Journal of the American Planning Association
I have been JAPA’s book review editor for a year and have included reviews on diverse topics, fro... more I have been JAPA’s book review editor for a year and have included reviews on diverse topics, from the role skateboarding plays in city design (see Nemeth in this issue) to the rebuilding of New Yo...
Bicycle Justice and Urban Transformation
Institute of Urban Regional Development, Dec 1, 2004
Institute For the Study of Social Change, Sep 24, 2007
Journal of Planning Education and Research, 2015
ABSTRACT This commentary brings together four scholars who have taught courses in diversity and i... more ABSTRACT This commentary brings together four scholars who have taught courses in diversity and inequity in planning to reflect on the challenges of speaking to and about issues of race, ethnicity, and cultural difference in contemporary equity and advocacy planning. Using evidence gathered from over forty-five years of collective teaching experience, we highlight students’ struggles with questions about racial inequality inside the classroom and working with marginalized communities outside the classroom. The article offers pedagogical lessons for planning, highlighting strategies to help students and instructors navigate tough personal and professional questions about advocacy and equity planning in today’s multicultural, “post-racial” world.
This article argues that the experiences and group formation of the Latino population in the Unit... more This article argues that the experiences and group formation of the Latino population in the United States can best be understood by employing a framework which examines global economic and political forces—forces which draw upon Latin America’s global reserve army of labor to meet and exceed U.S. national labor demands in order to increase capital accumulation. While cautioning against viewing Latinos as a homogenous ‘‘culture,’’ the authors’ framework acknowledges shared racialized historical experiences and examines how a large segment of the Latino population fits into distinct spheres of the U.S. labor and economic system. The authors ground their theoretical framing using a case study of Guatemalan immigrants in a small U.S. Midwestern town. The authors conclude that Latinos in U.S. labor markets are used to perpetuate power dynamics, disrupt worker consciousness, and racialize Latinos around jobs.
Urban Studies, 2014
Recent case studies of receiving communities have established that translocal immigrants are tran... more Recent case studies of receiving communities have established that translocal immigrants are transforming their neighbourhoods, producing spaces of identity. While these studies have focused on the reshaping of local power dynamics, less attention has been given to the spaces, themselves, and the qualities that influence identity. This study utilises place identity literature, from environmental psychology, to explore the remaking of MacArthur Park, a public space at the centre of a Mexican and Central American immigrant community in Los Angeles, California. We find that new ‘place identities’ are influenced by the specific physical, social, and cultural elements of the park, as study participants attempt to maintain identities influenced by important places in their sending communities. The result is a park that has emotional significance for participants, significance that leads to agency – everyday and political practices – to protect the park, sometimes in the face of immense ch...
Berkeley La Raza LJ, 2006
... Gerardo Sandoval earned his Ph.D. in the Department of City and Regional Planning at the Univ... more ... Gerardo Sandoval earned his Ph.D. in the Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of California, Berkeley ... 9. Alvin R. Graves, Azorean Portuguese: A Study of the Portuguese Dairymen in the San Joaquin Valley of California (1970) (unpublished Master's thesis ...
Journal of Planning Education and Research, Feb 17, 2015
Journal Articles and Book Chapters by Gerardo Sandoval
Rapid and dramatic Latino/a population growth in recent years has taken place in ‘new gateways’, ... more Rapid and dramatic Latino/a population growth in recent years has taken place in ‘new gateways’, which include, notably, rural communities. Hence, as much as Latino Urbanism is shaping the metropolitan landscape, given these recent and ongoing demographic trends, efforts to understand and engage Latino/a placemaking must also attend to the rural realm. By studying an Iowan town we contribute to
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Articles in Referred Journals by Gerardo Sandoval
Papers by Gerardo Sandoval
Journal Articles and Book Chapters by Gerardo Sandoval