Academic literature on the topic 'Indigenous Urban Landscape'

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Journal articles on the topic "Indigenous Urban Landscape"

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Qin, Xu. "The Study on Urban Landscape Suitability Index of Indigenous Arbors, Shrubs In Nanchang." E3S Web of Conferences 283 (2021): 02009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202128302009.

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This paper through brainstorming, the Delphi method, and in-meeting & after-meeting method, screening out suitability evaluation indicators of indigenous arbors,shrubs plants for urban landscapes in Nanchang. It sets up the suitability evaluation indicator system of indigenous arbors, shrubs to urban landscapes in Nanchang. To improve bio-diversity in cities, we need to focus on indigenous plants in greening initiatives. In this study, the indigenous plants in Nanchang were investigated to analyze the current situations of indigenous plants in this region and their application in urban greening in Nanchang. The problems in using indigenous plants for greening in Nanchang City were analyzed and corresponding suggestions were made.
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Qin, Xu. "The Study on Urban Landscape Suitability Index of Indigenous Vines In Nanchang." E3S Web of Conferences 283 (2021): 02014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202128302014.

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This paper through brainstorming, the Delphi method, and in-meeting & after-meeting method, screening out suitability evaluation indicators of indigenous vines for urban landscapes in Nanchang. It sets up the suitability evaluation indicator system of indigenous vines to urban landscapes in Nanchang. The suitability index of 41 kinds of indigenous vines in Nanchang was calculated. Besides, 24 kinds of indigenous vines with a comprehensive score of more than 60 which were recommended by Nanchang were put forward. With these efforts, this paper can provide sufficient basis for the application of indigenous plants in vertical greening in Nanchang.
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Qin, Xu. "Resources Investigation of Indigenous Plants in Nanchang and Their Application in Urban Landscape." E3S Web of Conferences 283 (2021): 02015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202128302015.

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To improve bio-diversity in cities, we need to focus on indigenous plants in greening initiatives. In this study, the indigenous plants in Nanchang were investigated to analyze the current situations of indigenous plants in this region and their application in urban greening in Nanchang. The problems in using indigenous plants for greening in Nanchang City were analyzed and corresponding suggestions were made.
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du Toit, Marié J., D. Johan Kotze, and Sarel S. Cilliers. "Quantifying Long-Term Urban Grassland Dynamics: Biotic Homogenization and Extinction Debts." Sustainability 12, no. 5 (March 5, 2020): 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12051989.

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Sustainable urban nature conservation calls for a rethinking of conventional approaches. Traditionally, conservationists have not incorporated the history of the landscape in management strategies. This study shows that extant vegetation patterns are correlated to past landscapes indicating potential extinction debts. We calculated urban landscape measures for seven time periods (1938–2019) and correlated it to three vegetation sampling events (1995, 2012, 2019) using GLM models. We also tested whether urban vegetation was homogenizing. Our results indicated that urban vegetation in our study area is not currently homogenizing but that indigenous forb species richness is declining significantly. Furthermore, long-term studies are essential as the time lags identified for different vegetation sampling periods changed as well as the drivers best predicting these changes. Understanding these dynamics are critical to ensuring sustainable conservation of urban vegetation for future citizens.
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Valijärvi, Riitta-Liisa, and Lily Kahn. "The linguistic landscape of Nuuk, Greenland." Linguistic Landscape. An international journal 6, no. 3 (June 22, 2020): 265–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ll.19010.val.

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Abstract The purpose of this article is to present and analyse public and private signs in the Linguistic Landscape of Nuuk, the capital of Greenland. Nuuk is a trilingual environment including the indigenous language (West Greenlandic), the former colonial language (Danish), and a global language (English). West Greenlandic is a somewhat unusual case among indigenous languages in colonial and postcolonial settings because it is a statutory national language with a vigorous use. Our analysis examines the use of West Greenlandic, Danish, and English from the theoretical perspective of centre vs. periphery, devoting attention to the primary audiences (local vs. international) and chief functions (informational vs. symbolic) of the signs. As the first investigation into the Greenlandic Linguistic Landscape, our analysis can contribute to research on signs in urban multilingual indigenous language settings.
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Davidson, Jenna L. "Canadian Federalism, Indigenous-state Relations, and the Algonquin Land Claim." Canadian Planning and Policy / Aménagement et politique au Canada 2022 (November 16, 2022): 114–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/cpp-apc.v2022i1.14081.

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The Algonquin Land Claim negotiations have been ongoing for over 25 years in Ontario and will be the province’s first modern-day constitutionally protected treaty. Traditional territories of the Algonquin Anishinaabeg under claim include areas in the Ottawa River Valley and the City of Ottawa itself. As a result, this land claim is unique in jurisdictional complexity, situated in urban landscapes that are heavily populated and developed, as well as rural areas that feature cottage country, hunting and fishing camps, provincial parks and natural resource projects. To answer the question: what is the process for negotiating lands for transfer to Indigenous communities within urban and rural contexts? This research investigates the Algonquin Land Claim case study within Canada’s current jurisprudential landscape of Indigenous sovereignty and recognition, and the implications it has for land use planning in Ontario. As a practical profession operating within relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities, the study explores planning practices in the context of negotiating a modern-day treaty. This recount of Canada’s legislative history and its interaction with Indigenous nations infuses many references to the fundamental attributes of Canadian federalism, Indigenous jurisdiction and the tensions that lie between the two concepts.
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Albro, Robert. "Cholo Politics and Urban Indigenous Self-Fashioning in Bolivia." Bolivian Studies Journal/Revista de Estudios Bolivianos 25 (May 11, 2020): 29–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/bsj.2019.216.

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This article reviews recent ethnographic approaches to indigeneity in Bolivia from the global north. It examines some consequences of ethnographic choices to treat indigeneity as primarily a political challenge of power and inclusion, where indigenous identity is understood to be most characteristically expressed in collective terms or through social mobilization. At the same time, it also assesses a complementary ethnographic focus upon legacies of neoliberalism, as a major context for situating contemporary indigenous projects in Bolivia, specifically, ethnographic contrasts drawn between political indigeneity and the liberal subject. Finally, this article offers an account of indigenous sense-making for the urban landscape of Quillacollo and explores the relevance of indigenous claims as integral to that small city’s “cholo politics,” and as an alternative means of understanding the construction of indigenous subjects.
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Sinamai, Ashton. "Ivhu rinotsamwa: Landscape Memory and Cultural Landscapes in Zimbabwe and Tropical Africa." eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the Tropics 21, no. 1 (March 30, 2022): 51–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.25120/etropic.21.1.2022.3836.

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Perceptions of the various cultural landscapes of tropical Africa continue to be overdetermined by western philosophies. This is, of course, a legacy of colonialism and the neo-colonial global politics that dictate types of knowledge, and direct flows of knowledge. Knowledges of the communities of former colonised countries are seen as ancillary at best, and at worst, irrational. However, such ‘indigenous knowledge’ systems contain information that could transform how we think about cultural landscapes, cultural heritage, and the conception of 'intangible heritage’. In many non-western societies, the landscape shapes culture; rather than human culture shaping the landscape – which is the notion that continues to inform heritage. Such a human-centric experience of landscape and heritage displaces the ability to experience the sensorial landscape. This paper outlines how landscapes are perceived in tropical Africa, with an example from Zimbabwe, and how this perception can be used to enrich mainstream archaeology, anthropology, and cultural heritage studies. Landscapes have a memory of their own, which plays a part in creating the ‘ruins’ we research or visit. Such landscape memory determines the preservation of heritage as well as human memory. The paper thus advocates for the inclusion of ‘indigenous knowledge’ systems in the widening of the theoretical base of archaeology, anthropology, and heritage studies.
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Koski, Ronda, and William Jacobi. "Tree Pathogen Survival in Chipped Wood Mulch." Arboriculture & Urban Forestry 30, no. 3 (May 1, 2004): 165–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.48044/jauf.2004.020.

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Uncomposted wood chips are often used as landscape mulches. Chips are commonly derived from landscape trees removed because they were in poor health and often contained plant pests. Chips are also derived from pallets and other wood packing materials that may harbor indigenous and exotic plant pathogens. A study was initiated to determine how long a fungal plant pathogen could survive in uncomposted wood chip mulch in an urban landscape. Thyronectria austroamericana, the causal agent of Thyronectria canker in honeylocust (Gleditsia triacanthos) trees, was used to inoculate branches of honeylocust trees. Cankered branch pieces were placed into mulched areas surrounding honeylocust trees growing under two irrigation regimes. Thyronectria austroamericana recovered from cankered wood pieces after 98 weeks produced cankers when inoculated into branches of honeylocust trees. Irrigation regimes did not affect recovery of the fungus. Cankered wood pieces remained a source of inoculum for 143 weeks after placement in the mulched areas. Due to the longevity of pathogen survival, uncomposted mulch derived from honeylocust trees infected with T. austroamericana should not be placed around honeylocust trees in urban landscapes. Using uncomposted wood chips derived from wood packing materials could increase the risk of introducing exotic plant pathogens to urban landscapes.
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THRUSH, COLL. "City of the Changers." Pacific Historical Review 75, no. 1 (February 1, 2006): 89–117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/phr.2006.75.1.89.

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Between the 1880s and the 1930s indigenous people continued to eke out traditional livings along the waterways and shorelines of Seattle's urbanizing and industrializing landscape. During those same years, however, the city's civic leaders and urban planners oversaw massive transformations of that landscape, including the creation of a ship canal linking Puget Sound with Lake Washington and the straightening of the Duwamish River. These transformations typified the modernizing ethos that sought to improve nature to ameliorate or even end social conflict. The struggle of the Duwamish and other local indigenous people to survive urban change, as well as the efforts by residents of nearby Indian reservations to maintain connections to places within the city, illustrate the complex, ironic legacies of Seattle's environmental history. They also show the ways in which urban and Native history are linked through both material and discursive practices.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Indigenous Urban Landscape"

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Abudjain, Ibrahim M. N. "The use of indigenous plants in landscape of Saudi Arabia." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 2003. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/6009/.

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Throughout the world increasing use is being made of native plants in urban landscapes, both to preserve regional visual character, conserve native biodiversity and to reduce energy inputs in the urban landscape. In Saudi Arabia most designed urban landscapes employ non indigenous plants. This use of exotic plants is problematic as these species require considerably more water and maintenance, This study establishes a basic understanding of the use of twenty Saudi indigenous plants for semi-nature landscape. We have identified the suitable methods for breaking dormancy and the germinating of these species. We have also selected the most appropriate time for germination by defining the optimal germination temperature of each species. In general most of these species were found to have adaptation to cope with water stress and salinity. For most of these species the maximum germination percentage was at the temperatures between 20 T and 30 T. Competition is one of the most important factors which controls the success of a sown community. Therefore we have investigated the establishment of species in mixture under simulated Saudi conditions using microcosm competition experiments within communities of native species. The results show that in the survival of sown species soil moisture stress was the major factor determining survival. Greater competition for moisture was demonstrated in the weedy treatment. It is clear that weeds would be a problem in practice in the field in dry climate. In terms of the growth of these species, at high water stress; weeds are less competitive than under low water stress. Therefore on very weedy sites irrigation would not be valuable in practice. Cutting may be helpful for the establishment of these species within a community in weedy sites. Overall, the results of these studies demonstrate that these twenty Saudi indigenous species could be used in landscape within the target species method where plants are grown individually or in-groups of one or two species. Also they can be used within the target community method for creating communities in practice in semi-natural landscape projects in Saudi Arabia.
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Books on the topic "Indigenous Urban Landscape"

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Somerville, Margaret. Body/landscape journals. North Melbourne, Vic: Spinifex Press, 1999.

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White, Jerry, and Jodi Bruhn. Aboriginal Policy Research: Exploring the Urban Landscape. Thompson Educational Publishing, 2010.

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Somerville, Margaret. Body/Landscape Journals. Spinifex Press, 2000.

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Fowler, William R. A Historical Archaeology of Early Spanish Colonial Urbanism in Central America. University Press of Florida, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813069128.001.0001.

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Founded as a military encampment in 1525, abandoned, and refounded in 1528 as an early Spanish colonial town, the town of San Salvador had an indigenous population perhaps twenty times greater in number than its Spanish population. Abandoned 1545-60, its brief occupation spans the crucial years of the early colonial period in Central America. The well-preserved ruins of this town, known today as the site of Ciudad Vieja, afford a rare opportunity for archaeological study of the dynamics of early Spanish-indigenous interaction and entanglement. Approximately two dozen Spanish cities were founded in Central America during the early colonial period. Few have been investigated archaeologically, and Ciudad Vieja is unique among them for its integrity, preservation, visibility, and accessibility. The landscapes of these urban settlements formed the spatial matrices within which their inhabitants embodied the habitus of social and physical relations of their lives, structuring social encounters through the production and reproduction of social relationships. Their habitus and relationships were products of actions crystallized at prescribed places and materialized in the plans, layouts, architecture, and material culture objects of the towns. The present book emphasizes a modern-world archaeological approach featuring detailed spatial analysis of the town, viewing it as an urban landscape and emphasizing the mutual interactions of the individuals and different cultural groups that shared the urban space. The study is set within a dialectical historical framework for the development of urbanism in medieval and early modern Spain and the early Spanish colonial Caribbean and Central America.
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Cary, Geoffrey, David Lindenmayer, and Stephen Dovers, eds. Australia Burning. CSIRO Publishing, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643090965.

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The phenomenon of fire in the Australian landscape traverses many interests and disciplines. At a national level, there is an urgent need for the integration of both the natural and social sciences in the formulation of public policy. With contributions from 30 leading experts, Australia Burning draws together these issues, under the themes: Ecology and the environment Fire behaviour and fire regime science People and property Policy, institutional arrangements and the legal framework Indigenous land and fire management The book examines some of the key questions that relate to the ecology, prediction and management of fire, urban planning, law, insurance, and community issues, including indigenous and non-indigenous concerns. It looks at what we need to know to inform public policy, given the present risks and uncertainty, and explores the avenues for closer integration between science, policy and the community.
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Pieris, Anoma, and Janet McGaw. Assembling the Centre : Architecture for Indigenous Cultures: Australia and Beyond. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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Assembling the Centre : Architecture for Indigenous Cultures: Australia and Beyond. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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Pieris, Anoma, and Janet McGaw. Assembling the Centre : Architecture for Indigenous Cultures: Australia and Beyond. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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Pieris, Anoma, and Janet McGaw. Assembling the Centre : Architecture for Indigenous Cultures: Australia and Beyond. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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Pieris, Anoma, and Janet McGaw. Assembling the Centre : Architecture for Indigenous Cultures: Australia and Beyond. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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Book chapters on the topic "Indigenous Urban Landscape"

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De Meulder, Bruno, Julie Marin, and Kelly Shannon. "Evolving Relations of Landscape, Infrastructure and Urbanization Toward Circularity: Flanders and Vietnam." In Regenerative Territories, 107–21. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-78536-9_6.

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AbstractA great deal of the contemporary discourse around circularity revolves around waste—the elimination of waste (and wastelands) through recycling, renewing and reuse (3Rs). In line with industrial ecological thinking, the discourse often focuses on resource efficiency and the shift toward renewables. The reconstitution of numerous previous ecologies is at most a byproduct of the deliberate design of today’s cyclic systems. Individual projects are often heralded for their innovative aspects (both high- and low-tech) and the concept has become popularly embraced in much of the Western world. Nevertheless, contemporary spatial circularity practices appear often to be detached from their particular socio-cultural and landscape ecologies. There is an emphasis on performative aspects and far too often a series of normative tools create cookie-cutter solutions that disregard locational assets—spatial as well as socio-cultural. The re-prefix is evident for developed economies and geographies, but not as obvious in the context of rapidly transforming and newly urbanizing territories. At the same time, the notion of circularity has been deeply embedded in indigenous, pre-modern and non-Western worldviews and strongly mirrored in historic constellations of urban, rural and territorial development. This contribution focuses on two contexts, Flanders in Belgium and the rural highlands, the Mekong Delta and Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam, which reveal that in spite of the near-universal prevalence of the Western development paradigm, there are fundamentally different notions of circularity in history and regarding present-day urbanization. Historically, in both contexts, the city and its larger territory formed a social, economic and ecological unity. There was a focus is on the interdependent development of notions of circularity in the ever-evolving relations of landscape, infrastructure and urbanization. In the development of contemporary circularity, there are clear insights that can be drawn from the deep understandings of historic interdependencies and the particular mechanisms and typologies utilized. The research questions addressed are in line with territorial ecology’s call to incorporate socio-cultural and spatial dimensions when trying to understand how territorial metabolisms function (Barles, Revue D’économie Régionale and Urbaine:819–836, 2017). They are as follows: how can case studies from two seemingly disparate regions in the world inform the present-day wave of homogenized research on circularity? How can specific socio-cultural contexts, through their historical trajectories, nuance the discourse and even give insights with regard to broadened and contextualized understandings of circularity? The case studies firstly focus on past site-specific cyclic interplays between landscape, infrastructure and urbanization and their gradual dissolution into linearity. Secondly, the case studies explicitly focus on multi-year design research projects by OSA (Research Urbanism and Architecture, KU Leuven), which underscore new relations of landscape, infrastructure and urbanization and emphasize the resourcefulness of the territory itself. The design research has been elaborated in collaboration with relevant stakeholders and experts and at the request of governmental agencies.
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Marshall, Chels, and Jason Twill. "Using Indigenous Knowledge in Climate Resistance Strategies for Future Urban Environments." In Design for Regenerative Cities and Landscapes, 49–63. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-97023-9_3.

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"2862 indigenous species [n]." In Encyclopedic Dictionary of Landscape and Urban Planning, 471–72. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76435-9_6477.

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Thrush, Coll. "The Unhidden City." In Indigenous London. Yale University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300206302.003.0001.

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This chapter adds to the canon of secret Londons through the inscription of another layer, another arcane and invisible text in the palimpsest that is the urban landscape. Such accounts of other Londons gesture toward the irreducible survivals of past landscapes in a place that constantly unearths its own history. As stated by Prof. Timothy Morton, “the streets beneath the streets, the Roman Wall, the boarded-up houses, the unexploded bombs, are records of everything that happened to London.” London's history exists in its form. From histories of the Underground to accounts by urban explorers entering the city's sewers and crypts, from compendia of obscure folklore to catalogs of nearly forgotten ghost stories, London provokes a predilection with the hidden.
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"2861 indigenous plant species [n]." In Encyclopedic Dictionary of Landscape and Urban Planning, 471. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76435-9_6476.

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Fowler, William R. "The Urban Landscape of Ciudad Vieja." In A Historical Archaeology of Early Spanish Colonial Urbanism in Central America, 84–130. University Press of Florida, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813069128.003.0005.

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Archaeological excavations of approximately 20 structures during the field seasons from 1996 to 2015, followed by detailed architectural studies and spatial analyses, have enabled interpretations of the Ciudad Vieja urban landscape, or townscape, and built environment. The structures include two major civic constructions, one religious complex, two buildings of a commercial or commercial/industrial nature, six structures interpreted as Spanish residences, and two structures interpreted as indigenous residences. Spanish and Spanish-related constructions display a remarkable consistency in orientation and construction techniques. With the exception of Structure 1D1, which may have been constructed before the grid plan of the town was laid out, all known Spanish buildings are multiroom constructions aligned to 12°, and all of these constructions share the same type of stone foundations, at least 83 cm (one Spanish vara) in width, and built to a depth of at least one meter. Indigenous structures, on the other hand, consisted of a single room built on a single course of uncut basalt stones with walls of bajareque and thatched roofs. These architectural differences highlight major differences in Spanish and indigenous practice and embodiment of habitus in the urban landscape of the villa of San Salvador.
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"3796 nonindigenous species [n] [US]/non-indigenous species [n] [UK]." In Encyclopedic Dictionary of Landscape and Urban Planning, 629. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76435-9_8579.

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Fowler, William R. "Ciudad Vieja in the Context of Modern-World Historical Archaeology." In A Historical Archaeology of Early Spanish Colonial Urbanism in Central America, 3–31. University Press of Florida, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813069128.003.0001.

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The archaeological site of Ciudad Vieja is introduced in the context of modern-world archaeology, a special form of historical archaeology emphasizing interconnectedness and interrelationships across time and space. The study deals with the urban form of the early colonial Spanish American city as landscape and the ways in which this new urban landscape or townscape provided a material culture medium for the exercise of social power within specific conjunctures of agency and structure. The specific subject is the villa or town of San Salvador, founded during the Spanish-Pipil War, inhabited by both Spaniards and indigenous Mesoamericans during the early colonial period, and known today archaeologically as Ciudad Vieja. Both cultural groups contributed through their daily practice, their habitus and doxa, and their interactions with each other and the urban landscape.
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Grau, Marion. "Cathedral and Town." In Pilgrimage, Landscape, and Identity, 121–58. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197598634.003.0007.

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Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim is the historical resting place of St. Olav and an end point of many of the pilgrimage trails in Norway. The history of the cathedral intersects with the history of the city and the region as one of significant economic and religious significance. The movement of St. Olav’s relics throughout the city matches urban and religiocultural development of city and nation. This chapter explores the cathedral’s architecture and use and how contemporary engagements with the space facilitate ritual creativity and are part of the hosting and welcoming of pilgrims. Along with other centers of hospitality, the cathedral looms especially large as a main attraction point for both tourists and pilgrims in Trondheim, as an adaptable space for many purposes. The annual St. Olavsfest is a ten-day festival that begins with the saint’s day and features liturgies, concerts, plays, lectures, a medieval market, and televised panel discussions to involve city and region in the celebration of local history and culture. Controversial topics such as the colonial repression of Sámi indigenous peoples, the violent heritage of Viking king St. Olav, religious and other forms of discrimination, social injustice, and international solidarity are among the themes discussed during the festival. Thus, the “protest” in Protestantism is reflected in a critical engagement with history and with the ongoing development of the ritualization of Christian history and heritage in Norway.
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"From Ethnic to Urban Identities? Greek Colonists and Indigenous Society in the Sibaritide, South Italy. A Landscape Archaeological Approach." In Constructions of Greek Past, 11–23. BRILL, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004495463_003.

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Conference papers on the topic "Indigenous Urban Landscape"

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Siddiqua, Ayasha, and Farida Nilufar. "Searching Landscape Elements from Indigenous Land-Water Interface to Develop Integrated Landscape Framework for Water Sensitive Urban Design." In 3rd International Conference of Contemporary Affairs in Architecture and Urbanism. Alanya Hamdullah Emin Paşa Üniversitesi, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.38027/n142020iccaua316287.

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Melchiors, Lucia C., Xinxin Wang, and Matthew Bradbury. "A collaborative design studio approach to safeguard waterfront resilience in Auckland, Aotearoa New Zeland." In Post-Oil City Planning for Urban Green Deals Virtual Congress. ISOCARP, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/sxla6361.

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This paper discusses the potential of an interdisciplinary design studio to develop innovative thinking in response to the climatic and social challenges facing contemporary waterfront redevelopments. Climate change has a broad and growing range of environmental effects on coastal cities that demand urgent responses. The paper describes the development of a collaborative and interdisciplinary design studio that identified a number of design responses to meet the challenges of climate change. The studio brought together students and lecturers from architecture and landscape architecture along with relevant stakeholders (government agencies, practitioners, community) to collaborate on the redevelopment of the Onehunga Port in Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand. Engagement with mana whenua (the indigenous people of specific areas of Aotearoa New Zealand) was critical. The students worked in teams to conduct critical research and design throughout a masterplanning design process. The outcomes of the studio included openended and propositional designs rather than the conventional masterplans. Students design work addressed complex problems, such as sea-level rise, to develop a more resilient urban future. Beyond the immediate objectives of the studio, the interdisciplinary collaboration demonstrated a range of benefits, including students learning to work in teams, sharing complementary views, broadening perspectives and increasing social awareness.
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Cilliers, Elizelle Juanee. "Transdisciplinary planning approaches towards resilience." In 55th ISOCARP World Planning Congress, Beyond Metropolis, Jakarta-Bogor, Indonesia. ISOCARP, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/afnr6129.

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Urban functions are no longer separated spatially or socially, and the contest between diverse land-uses is reaching a peak due to growing populations and increasing urbanization that inflates the pressure on already strained resources within the urban fabric. The trend of depletion of green spaces is an increasing global phenomenon, intensifying the growing carbon footprint, impairing water quality and compromising health and overall quality of life, ultimately leading to cities that are far removed from the safe, clean, and livable environments, as envisioned in planning theory. Green spaces are often viewed as a “luxury good”, despite the comprehensive literature on the extensive benefits of such spaces to their host cities and communities. Misconceptions relating to the notion of green spaces are reflected in the undervaluation of these spaces, under-prioritization in the budgeting process and ultimate negligence in terms of broader spatial planning approaches. The lack of function and ownership further exacerbate the social- and economic value of these green spaces, especially within the South African context, apparent by the disproval of the compensation hypothesis and rejection of the proximity principle. Much effort will be needed to change perceptions and sensitize decision-makers to understand green spaces as a “public good” and “economic asset”. Resilience thinking could pose solutions in this regard, drawing on transdisciplinary planning approaches to manage change and steer Spatial Planning towards the era of transurbanism. It would however, require the emancipation of the disciplinary identity of Spatial Planning as crucial driver towards resilience, departing from theoretical and methodological frames of supplementary disciplines, as well as the indigenous knowledge and living experiences of communities, to co-produce urban innovations. Conveying strategic and lateral thinking, contemporary Planners would need to become generative leaders, with socio-emotional intelligence, to generate innovation and co-create solutions for strained social contexts, for depleting scare resources, for managing change of contemporary urban landscapes.
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Martínez, Mónica. "Los pueblos del desierto: conquista, urbanización y puesta en producción del territorio de La Pampa, Argentina (1879-1930)." In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Barcelona: Instituto de Arte Americano. Universidad de Buenos Aires, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.5919.

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Este estudio aborda la ocupación nacional del territorio de La Pampa y el desplazamiento de la cultura indígena - tras la conquista - avanzando sobre el "desierto", así como las sucesivas etapas de trazado, distribución de la tierra, fundación de pueblos y puesta en producción, poniendo de manifiesto la existencia de un plan de urbanización y colonización del territorio que integra - en un corto plazo - a la Argentina al sistema económico mundial. Iniciado el Siglo XX, una fiebre de pueblos se trazan y mantienen una fuerte actividad productiva rural con su entorno, apoyados en un modelo dominado por el trazado ferroviario que integra los elementos de configuración territorial – rieles, cuadros de estaciones, estaciones, caminos rurales, trazado de las colonias - a la escala urbana. El estudio de los pueblos - su tipificación tentativa, las teorías y modelos de referencia - constituye el objetivo central de esta presentación. Su conocimiento permite verificar los rasgos principales de la morfología, el paisaje y la identidad de este territorio. This study addresses the national occupation of the territory of La Pampa and displacement of indigeno us culture - after the conquest - progress in the "desert" and tracing the successive stages, distribution of land, establishment of peoples and put into production, showing the existence of a development plan and colonization of the territory that integrates Argentina - in the short-term - to the economic world system. At the beginning of the twentieth century, immigrants have a strong rural productive activity with their environment, supported by a dominant railway layout that integrates spatial configuration items - rails, stations, roads, colonies path - to the urban scale. The study of towns, their tentative definition, theories and models of reference, is the focus of this resentation. The purpose of this study is to verify the main features of the morphology, landscape and identity of these towns.
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