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Search Results (1,039)

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25 pages, 4723 KB  
Article
Porcelain, Power, and Identity: The Global Life of Chinese Armorial Ware in the Eighteenth Century
by Qi Zhou
Arts 2025, 14(6), 128; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14060128 - 24 Oct 2025
Viewed by 157
Abstract
The eighteenth century marked a peak period of globalization, during which Chinese porcelain emerged as a pivotal commodity in global material culture. This study focuses on a distinctive category, Chinese armorial porcelain, as a transcultural and hybridity artefact exchanged between High Qing China [...] Read more.
The eighteenth century marked a peak period of globalization, during which Chinese porcelain emerged as a pivotal commodity in global material culture. This study focuses on a distinctive category, Chinese armorial porcelain, as a transcultural and hybridity artefact exchanged between High Qing China and Britain. Drawing on a multidisciplinary approach that combines close visual analysis with theoretical insights from material culture studies, postcolonial theory and consumer sociology, this study examines the evolving design language of these hybrid wares. It offers, for the first time, a systematic typology of Chinese decorative patterns on armorial porcelain and traces their compositional shifts over time. The analysis reveals a gradual Europeanization of these objects, corresponding to changing European perceptions of China—from a space of cultural fascination to a subordinated Orientalist otherness. At the same time, these porcelains register significant shifts in British social values, taste hierarchies, and consumption practices. Crucially, this study foregrounds the role of Chinese patterns, long treated as peripheral, as active agents in visual and cultural negotiation. Full article
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21 pages, 6881 KB  
Article
Agency, Resilience and ‘Surviving Well’ in Dutch Neighborhood Living Rooms
by Louwrens Botha, Oana Druta and Pieter van Wesemael
Architecture 2025, 5(4), 101; https://doi.org/10.3390/architecture5040101 - 23 Oct 2025
Viewed by 103
Abstract
Literature on community resilience has argued that it is (re)produced through sustained collective practices, and cautioned against neoliberal ‘resiliences’ which serve to justify state withdrawal and disinvestment. A critical and progressive understanding of resilience accounts for this by politicizing everyday practices and foregrounding [...] Read more.
Literature on community resilience has argued that it is (re)produced through sustained collective practices, and cautioned against neoliberal ‘resiliences’ which serve to justify state withdrawal and disinvestment. A critical and progressive understanding of resilience accounts for this by politicizing everyday practices and foregrounding community agency. More research is needed to show how these concerns are spatialized in different social, political, and economic contexts. This paper investigates the self-managed ‘buurthuiskamer’ (neighborhood living room) as a site of everyday practices of community resilience in the Netherlands. These spaces represent a historical form of social infrastructure being reinterpreted in the post-welfare-state, post-austerity urban context. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews in four such spaces, we use buurthuiskamers to illustrate a critical and plural understanding of community resilience based on cultivating agency. We show how communities ‘survive’ by defending and enhancing everyday urban livability in the present; how they move beyond mere survival towards communal ‘thriving’; and how participants are empowered to take collective action and decisions to ‘transform’ towards more just and inclusive futures. Finally, we highlight the structural precarity underpinning these spaces; the tension between the roles of meeting spaces as neutral social infrastructure and as spaces of belonging and appropriation; and the ambivalent mediating position they occupy between neoliberal local government and local communities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Spaces and Practices of Everyday Community Resilience)
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47 pages, 37877 KB  
Article
Building Shared Histories: Dioramas, Architectural Models, Collaboration, and Transatlantic African American Spaces, 1900–1940
by Emily C. Burns
Arts 2025, 14(6), 127; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14060127 - 23 Oct 2025
Viewed by 243
Abstract
Between 1900 and 1940, African American participants in transatlantic public exhibitions reclaimed a medium that often oppressed non-White bodies: the diorama. This essay traces a transatlantic conversation among African American artists about how to render Black history in diorama form, leveraging the miniature [...] Read more.
Between 1900 and 1940, African American participants in transatlantic public exhibitions reclaimed a medium that often oppressed non-White bodies: the diorama. This essay traces a transatlantic conversation among African American artists about how to render Black history in diorama form, leveraging the miniature format to make political arguments. In diorama series which circulated on both sides of the Atlantic, such as those designed by Thomas W. Hunster for the Exhibit of American Negroes in the Paris Universal Exposition in 1900 and the Pan-American Exposition in 1901, Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller for the Jamestown Ter-Centennial Exposition in 1907, and Charles C. Dawson for the American Negro Exposition in Chicago in 1940, African American makers selectively used architectural models to signify histories of oppression and liberation as they told transatlantic stories about Black migration and enslavement. This essay argues that this set of dioramas is entwined, growing from 9 to 14 to 33, and that Hunster, Fuller, and Dawson all rendered archetypal buildings, such as slave cabins or plantation homes, to designate the wide and encompassing scope of oppression, while they reference singular buildings associated with public institutions from government to universities—the M Street School in Washington DC, Carnegie Library at Howard University, Mother Bethel AME Church in Philadelphia, the Old Massachusetts State House, and the White House—to signify and emplace spaces of Black liberation. Building on research on the layered functions of miniatures and drawing on burgeoning scholarship on entwinements between race and architecture, the article speculates on how architecture style signifies through the models to reinforce what James C. Scott has parsed as dominant narratives and hidden transcripts. Seeking to build Black futurity, all three series facilitated community participation and collaboration to produce an intersocial construction of transatlantic African American history built through mobile models of architecture. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Black Artists in the Atlantic World)
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20 pages, 2845 KB  
Article
Philosophical Inquiry with 5–7-Year-Olds: ‘My New Thinking Friends’
by Aimee Quickfall
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(10), 1410; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15101410 - 20 Oct 2025
Viewed by 176
Abstract
This paper reports on a small-scale qualitative study, using philosophical inquiry in Key Stage 1 (5–7-year-old children). The study involved a one hour per week session of philosophical inquiry in one primary school, ‘Philosophy Club’, with eight children taking part for six weeks. [...] Read more.
This paper reports on a small-scale qualitative study, using philosophical inquiry in Key Stage 1 (5–7-year-old children). The study involved a one hour per week session of philosophical inquiry in one primary school, ‘Philosophy Club’, with eight children taking part for six weeks. Multiple methods were used, including researcher observations, creative methods such as children’s drawings, notes, models, and discussion, which are combined to make ‘mosaics’ of data. Data analysis focused on broad inquiry foci from across the data, and in this paper, these are reported with reference to children’s views on Philosophy Club as a space to think with their friends, build a community and changing perceptions of club members over the six-week period. Conclusions are drawn tentatively on the benefits of philosophical inquiry clubs for building community and friendship with younger children, particularly in the wake of COVID-19 and potential gaps in social experience in their early years, and how teacher education in the use of philosophical inquiry might support this community building. Full article
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24 pages, 7469 KB  
Article
Visitor Behavioral Preferences at Cultural Heritage Museums: Evidence from Social Media Data
by Wenjie Peng, Chunyuan Gao, Bingmiao Zhu, Xun Zhu and Quan Jing
Buildings 2025, 15(20), 3756; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15203756 - 17 Oct 2025
Viewed by 398
Abstract
Cultural heritage museums, as integral components of the urban built environment and public cultural space, not only preserve historical memory but also subtly shape visitors’ psychological experiences and well-being. Yet the mechanisms linking museum environmental quality with visitor mental experiences remain insufficiently explored. [...] Read more.
Cultural heritage museums, as integral components of the urban built environment and public cultural space, not only preserve historical memory but also subtly shape visitors’ psychological experiences and well-being. Yet the mechanisms linking museum environmental quality with visitor mental experiences remain insufficiently explored. Drawing on 10,684 visitor reviews collected from Dianping, Weibo, and Ctrip, this study applies text mining and semantic analysis to construct an evaluation framework of visitor behavioral preferences and psychological experiences in heritage museums. The findings show that attention to spatial remains, historical artifacts, and cultural symbols is closely associated with positive emotions such as mystery, awe, and beauty, while adverse environmental conditions such as queuing and crowding often trigger negative feelings including fatigue, disappointment, and boredom. Further analysis reveals a clear pathway linking objects, behaviors, and experiences: spatial remains evoke psychological resonance through immersive perceptions of authenticity; artifacts are primarily linked to visual pleasure and emotional comfort; and cultural symbols are transformed into cognitive gains and spiritual meaning through interpretation and learning. Cross-regional comparison highlights significant differences among museums with distinct cultural backgrounds in terms of architectural aesthetics, educational value, and emotional resonance. This study not only offers a practical framework for the refined management and spatial optimization of heritage museums, but also demonstrates that high-quality cultural environments can promote mental health and emotional restoration. The results extend the interdisciplinary framework of museum research and provide empirical evidence for environmental improvement and public health promotion in cultural heritage spaces in the digital era. Full article
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16 pages, 5566 KB  
Article
What Is the Aesthetic Value of Industrial Heritage? A Study Grounded in the Chinese Context
by Sunny Han Han
Culture 2026, 1(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/culture1010002 - 17 Oct 2025
Viewed by 272
Abstract
Industrial heritage has emerged in recent decades as a distinctive category within cultural heritage, though its aesthetic significance remains underexplored. Unlike traditional monuments with long historical resonance, industrial remains are often recent, standardized, and seemingly devoid of unique cultural symbolism. Yet, in China—where [...] Read more.
Industrial heritage has emerged in recent decades as a distinctive category within cultural heritage, though its aesthetic significance remains underexplored. Unlike traditional monuments with long historical resonance, industrial remains are often recent, standardized, and seemingly devoid of unique cultural symbolism. Yet, in China—where industrial production expanded massively under both demographic pressures and the Maoist planned economy—these sites now constitute one of the world’s largest inventories of heritage. This study builds on earlier discussions of heritage aesthetics by systematically analyzing the foundations of aesthetic value in industrial heritage, combining historical, functional, and identity-driven perspectives. Drawing on long-term field research, archival documentation, and policy analysis, it examines how adaptive reuse projects—from Beijing’s 798 Art District to Shougang Park and the reconfigured factories of Shanghai and Wuhan—redefine the visual and social significance of former industrial sites. The methodology integrates heritage aesthetic theory with case-based evidence to assess three key components: technological–historical traces, landscape transformation, and collective memory. Results indicate that aesthetic value rarely arises from static preservation but is constructed through refunctionalization, where industrial ruins acquire renewed meaning as cultural parks, creative hubs, or community spaces. Moreover, large-scale Chinese practices reveal that industrial heritage possesses not only visual appeal but also profound identity-based resonance for generations shaped by the “factory managing community.” By situating industrial heritage within the broader aesthetic system of cultural heritage, this research demonstrates that its value lies in the synthesis of function, memory, and landscape, and that China’s experience provides a compelling framework for rethinking global approaches to industrial heritage aesthetics. Full article
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19 pages, 308 KB  
Article
Adoptees Traveling Worlds: Love and Multiplicitous Being in Adoptees’ Autofictional Writing
by Sophie Withaeckx
Genealogy 2025, 9(4), 114; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9040114 - 16 Oct 2025
Viewed by 250
Abstract
In the adoptive family, discourses of love have been mobilized to attach the adoptee to the intimate space of the nuclear family, thereby detaching them from other spaces and meaningful others. In this article, I engage with the question of what kinds of [...] Read more.
In the adoptive family, discourses of love have been mobilized to attach the adoptee to the intimate space of the nuclear family, thereby detaching them from other spaces and meaningful others. In this article, I engage with the question of what kinds of love have been erased in the adoptive family, how understandings of love impact upon adoptees’ subjectivity and which ways of imagining the self, in its connection to present and absent others, thereby become disabled. In order to assess whether alternative understandings of love, self and kinship can be imaginable within the adoptive family, I turn towards two works of autofiction written by adoptees: Shâb ou la nuit by the French author Cécile Ladjali and The girl I am, was and never will be by US author Shannon Gibney. In examining their articulations of love and the difficulties of finding words for that which might exist outside of dominant, quasi-hegemonic discourses, I draw on Maria Lugones’ articulation of love as connected to her theory of world-traveling. This enables us to understand adoption narratives and searches as attempts to reconnect with pre-existing worlds and meaningful others, made inaccessible by the Euromodern institution of adoption. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Adoption Is Stranger than Fiction)
26 pages, 1308 KB  
Article
Women’s Wise Walkshops: A Participatory Feminist Approach to Urban Co-Design in Ferrara, Italy
by Letizia Carrera
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(10), 609; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14100609 - 15 Oct 2025
Viewed by 283
Abstract
This paper presents the Women’s Wise Walkshops (WWW) project, a participatory feminist methodology for urban co-design implemented in Ferrara, Italy. The research explores how women’s situated knowledge and lived experiences can inform inclusive urban planning through collaborative urban traversals and participatory design processes. [...] Read more.
This paper presents the Women’s Wise Walkshops (WWW) project, a participatory feminist methodology for urban co-design implemented in Ferrara, Italy. The research explores how women’s situated knowledge and lived experiences can inform inclusive urban planning through collaborative urban traversals and participatory design processes. Drawing on feminist epistemologies and combining elements of flâneuserie and Situationist dérive, the WWW methodology employs a seven-phase approach including semi-structured interviews, focus groups, urban walkshops, and collective mapping exercises. The study involved approximately 110 women across two distinct neighborhoods—Arianuova-Giardino and Krasnodar—representing diverse socio-demographic backgrounds. Through a thematic analysis of interviews, visual documentation, and post-walkshop discussions, six key thematic clusters emerged: safety, public space, mobility systems, community spaces and associations, public services for citizens, and participatory processes. The findings reveal that women’s perspectives from marginalized positions provide critical insights into urban inequalities and offer transformative visions for more inclusive cities. The research shows that structured participatory processes not only generate valuable urban policy recommendations but also foster community cohesion, democratic engagement, and spatial justice. The WWW methodology represents a significant contribution to feminist urban studies and participatory planning, offering a replicable framework for integrating women’s voices into urban governance and design processes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Community and Urban Sociology)
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22 pages, 497 KB  
Article
Trauma-Informed and Healing Architecture in Young People’s Correctional Facilities: A Comparative Case Study on Design, Well-Being, and Reintegration
by Nadereh Afzhool and Ayten Özsavaş Akçay
Buildings 2025, 15(20), 3687; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15203687 - 13 Oct 2025
Viewed by 501
Abstract
This study investigates how trauma-informed and healing-centred architectural design is associated with rehabilitation and reintegration outcomes in young people’s correctional facilities. Drawing on international case studies, the analysis demonstrates that architecture is not a neutral backdrop but a contributing determinant within broader justice [...] Read more.
This study investigates how trauma-informed and healing-centred architectural design is associated with rehabilitation and reintegration outcomes in young people’s correctional facilities. Drawing on international case studies, the analysis demonstrates that architecture is not a neutral backdrop but a contributing determinant within broader justice ecosystems. Trauma-informed environments are consistently linked to reductions in re-traumatisation and improvements in emotional regulation, while small-scale, community-oriented facilities are associated with enhanced skill development, autonomy, and reintegration potential. Culturally responsive designs that incorporate Indigenous practices and symbolic architecture are observed to support identity, resilience, and community belonging, underscoring the importance of cultural continuity in rehabilitation processes. In parallel, sustainable features such as biophilic design, renewable energy systems, and natural light are correlated with improvements in ecological performance and psychosocial well-being, indicating that sustainability and rehabilitation may be mutually reinforcing goals. Notably, the analysis highlights that supportive environments are also associated with staff well-being and institutional stability, underscoring the broader organisational benefits of healing architecture. The findings suggest that young people’s correctional facilities should not replicate adult prisons but instead provide safe, developmental, and culturally grounded spaces that respond to adolescents’ unique needs. This study contributes a novel conceptual model—the Trauma-Informed Healing Architecture (TIHA) framework—that integrates trauma-informed, cultural, and ecological design strategies within the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The framework defines global standards as universal principles—safety, dignity, cultural responsiveness, and natural light—while remaining adaptable to local resources and justice systems. In this way, it provides internationally relevant yet context-sensitive guidance for young people’s correctional reform. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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35 pages, 3718 KB  
Article
Advancing Sustainable Construction Through 5D Digital EIA and Ecosystem Restoration
by Tomo Cerovšek
Sustainability 2025, 17(20), 9062; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17209062 - 13 Oct 2025
Viewed by 921
Abstract
The construction sector drives nearly half of global material extraction, energy use, emissions, and waste, yet environmental impact assessment (EIA) remains a static document, fragmented and disconnected from dynamic ecological systems. Here, we propose an upgrade to a five-dimensional (5D) EIA framework that [...] Read more.
The construction sector drives nearly half of global material extraction, energy use, emissions, and waste, yet environmental impact assessment (EIA) remains a static document, fragmented and disconnected from dynamic ecological systems. Here, we propose an upgrade to a five-dimensional (5D) EIA framework that integrates space-time analysis (3D + time = 4D) with real-time monitoring and impact quantification (5D) to account for environmental footprint and prevent irreversible impacts. The methodology included an analysis of over 100 EIA permits and reports, supplemented by interviews, reviews of technologies and process and systems analysis. Central to this approach is the inclusion of 4D building information models (BIM) and nature’s self-cleansing capacity, which is often overlooked in conventional assessments. The proposed Integrated Environmental Decision Support Information System (I-EDSIS) would enable continuous impact tracking, cumulative effect evaluation, and insights into patterns for adaptive mitigation. Drawing on a national-scale case study, we show that building permits correlate with NOx and PM10 (r = 0.96), while pollutant levels vary by up to 1.5–3 times across months and within a day, revealing potential for time-sensitive adaptive construction and less ecological disruption. This perspective argues for reframing EIA as a proactive tool for sustainability, transparency, active durability, cross-sectoral data integration, and resilience-based development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Building Sustainability within a Smart Built Environment)
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25 pages, 4187 KB  
Article
Research on Collision Avoidance Method of USV Based on UAV Visual Assistance
by Tongbo Hu, Wei Guan, Chunqi Luo, Sheng Qu, Zhewen Cui and Shuhui Hao
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(10), 1955; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13101955 - 13 Oct 2025
Viewed by 382
Abstract
Collision avoidance technology serves as a critical enabler for autonomous navigation of unmanned surface vehicles (USVs). To address the limitations of incomplete environmental perception and inefficient decision-making for collision avoidance in USVs, this paper proposes an autonomous collision avoidance method based on deep [...] Read more.
Collision avoidance technology serves as a critical enabler for autonomous navigation of unmanned surface vehicles (USVs). To address the limitations of incomplete environmental perception and inefficient decision-making for collision avoidance in USVs, this paper proposes an autonomous collision avoidance method based on deep reinforcement learning. To overcome the restricted field of view of USV perception systems, visual assistance from an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) is introduced. Perception data acquired by the UAV are utilized to construct a high-dimensional state space that characterizes the distribution and motion trends of obstacles, while a low-dimensional state space is established using the USV’s own state information, together forming a hierarchical state space structure. Furthermore, to enhance navigation efficiency and mitigate the sparse-reward problem, this paper draws on the trajectory evaluation concept of the dynamic window approach (DWA) to design a set of process rewards. These are integrated with COLREGs-compliant rewards, collision penalties, and arrival rewards to construct a multi-dimensional reward function system. To validate the superiority of the proposed method, collision avoidance experiments are conducted across various scenarios. The results demonstrate that the proposed method enables USVs to achieve more efficient autonomous collision avoidance, indicating strong potential for engineering applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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19 pages, 725 KB  
Article
Resilience Behind Barriers: Life, Labour, and Lockdown in Singapore’s Dormitories
by Ganapathy Narayanan and Vineeta Sinha
Urban Sci. 2025, 9(10), 419; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci9100419 - 11 Oct 2025
Viewed by 455
Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, migrant workers in Singapore endured one of the longest and most stringent periods of confinement globally. Segregationist policies were intensified as the state imposed strict disciplinary regimes over workers’ mobility and everyday lives, framed as public health interventions but [...] Read more.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, migrant workers in Singapore endured one of the longest and most stringent periods of confinement globally. Segregationist policies were intensified as the state imposed strict disciplinary regimes over workers’ mobility and everyday lives, framed as public health interventions but functioning also as labor discipline and social control. This study asks: how did migrant workers experience, narrate, and endure life under such conditions of confinement? Drawing on sixteen in-depth interviews with South Asian male construction workers, conducted in dormitories and makeshift worksites, we adopt a grounded theory approach to elicit contextually grounded accounts of life under lockdown. The analysis highlights three interrelated themes: emotional regulation, migrant masculinity and the gendered politics of endurance, and digital connectivity as an affective infrastructure. These practices enabled workers to carve out agentic spaces within structures designed to render them passive. Our findings reveal that even amid fear, surveillance, overcrowding, and economic precarity, workers combined stoicism, transnational kinship ties, religious routines, and solidarity to sustain resilience. While initially guided by Foucauldian notions of surveillance and biopower, the study advances a counter-Foucauldian insight: that institutional control is never total, and migrant narratives of resilience offer nuanced understandings of agency under constrain. Full article
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16 pages, 364 KB  
Article
Challenges in Developing Research-Based Teacher Education in Kazakhstan
by Gulfiya Kuchumova and Dinara Mukhamejanova
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(10), 1339; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15101339 - 9 Oct 2025
Viewed by 346
Abstract
Pre-service research training is widely recognized as a crucial component of teacher education, preparing teachers who are critical, reflective, and inquiry-driven. Aligning with this global trend, Kazakhstan has also adopted a research turn in teacher education to enhance the quality of schooling. This [...] Read more.
Pre-service research training is widely recognized as a crucial component of teacher education, preparing teachers who are critical, reflective, and inquiry-driven. Aligning with this global trend, Kazakhstan has also adopted a research turn in teacher education to enhance the quality of schooling. This research examined the gap between policy intervention and institutional practices by exploring the barriers and challenges Kazakhstani universities encounter in implementing research-based teacher education. The study employed a qualitative multiple-case study research design. 45 academic staff and administration working at four teacher training universities were interviewed. Drawing on social practice theory, our study revealed that meaningful and sustainable implementation of research-based teacher education in Kazakhstan is hindered by a range of factors categorized into three intersubjective spaces: semantic, material, and social. We argue that the true transformation of teacher education into a more research-based field is impossible without concurrent remodeling of the arrangements that shape it. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Teacher Education)
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16 pages, 250 KB  
Article
More than Economic Contributors: Advocating for Refugees as Civically Engaged in the Midwest
by Fatima Sattar and Christopher Strunk
Genealogy 2025, 9(4), 107; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9040107 - 9 Oct 2025
Viewed by 347
Abstract
In the context of an increasingly hostile national political environment and federal cuts to refugee resettlement programs in the United States, advocates often highlight the economic contributions of immigrants and refugees to garner local support, especially in regions with histories of economic and [...] Read more.
In the context of an increasingly hostile national political environment and federal cuts to refugee resettlement programs in the United States, advocates often highlight the economic contributions of immigrants and refugees to garner local support, especially in regions with histories of economic and population decline. While these narratives continue to be a centerpiece of pro-immigrant and -refugee advocacy, in practice advocates and refugees themselves use a diverse set of frames to promote belonging. In this paper, we examine pro-refugee advocacy frames in a small, nontraditional destination in the Midwest. We draw on survey and focus group research with young adult refugees and nonprofit advocates and content analysis of online stories about refugees. We found that pro-refugee values frames (humanitarian and faith-based) and contributions frames (economic, cultural and civic) coexisted across the local landscape and were used by not only nonprofit advocates and local officials, but also by refugees themselves. While advocacy groups emphasized the dominant frame highlighting refugees’ economic contributions, they were also strategic in using overlapping frames to highlight a less public frame, refugees’ contributions to civic engagement through community service and volunteering. Advocates tended to reproduce the economic contributions frame to appeal to key stakeholders, which consequently obscures refugees’ diverse contributions, but we argue that refugee self-advocates’ use of the civic engagement frame pushes back against economic and other frames that limit their contributions and helps them to create spaces of belonging. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue (Re)Centering Midwest Refugee Resettlement and Home)
28 pages, 11565 KB  
Article
Reframing Urban Accessibility Through Universal Design: A Critical Review with Case Insights from Kaimakli Linear Park
by Maria Papanicolaou, Martha Katafygiotou and Thomas Dimopoulos
Land 2025, 14(10), 2017; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14102017 - 8 Oct 2025
Viewed by 688
Abstract
This paper presents a critical review of urban accessibility frameworks, standards, and implementation challenges, grounded in the principles of Universal Design (UD), Social Inclusion Theory, and Sustainable Urbanism. Drawing upon global guidelines, regulatory instruments, and recent academic discourse, it identifies common gaps between [...] Read more.
This paper presents a critical review of urban accessibility frameworks, standards, and implementation challenges, grounded in the principles of Universal Design (UD), Social Inclusion Theory, and Sustainable Urbanism. Drawing upon global guidelines, regulatory instruments, and recent academic discourse, it identifies common gaps between accessibility policy and the lived realities of urban space users. This paper integrates these insights with an applied case study of Kaimakli Linear Park in Nicosia, Cyprus—an observational field audit and stakeholder interview series that illustrates the practical challenges of implementing inclusive design in legacy urban environments. Key barriers identified include inconsistent application of design standards, limited tactile and sensory guidance, inadequate mobility infrastructure, and insufficient stakeholder coordination. The case is not offered as a statistically generalizable sample but as an illustrative microcosm of systemic accessibility deficits. This integrative approach offers a framework for diagnosing spatial exclusion in public parks and provides cost-effective, policy-aligned strategies for inclusive urban transformation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Planning and Landscape Architecture)
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