Village Buildings bibliography: Difference between revisions

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Bell, Bryan, and Katie Wakeford, Steve Badanes (2008). ''Expanding Architecture: Design as Activism''. Metropolis Books, 2008. 
 
Berg, Laura, ed. ''The First Oregonians.'' 2nd edition, 2007. Portland: Oregon Council for the Humanities''.''  
 
Bernheimer, Lily. "The Shape of (Housing) Things to Come." ''Next City'', Sep 30, 2019. https://nextcity.org/features/view/the-shape-of-housing-things-to-come. [excerpted from book by Bernheimer, ''The Shaping of Us: How Everyday Spaces Structure Our Lives, Behavior, and Well-Being'', 2019].  On Alastair Parvin, WikiHouse, and Citizen Sector home-building approach. 
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Finkes, Rebecca. (2019). "City Sanctioned Homeless Encampments: A Case Study Analysis of Seattle’s City-Permitted Villages." Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for Graduation with Honors Research Distinction in City and Regional Planning in the Knowlton School, The Ohio State University. May 2019. https://kb.osu.edu/bitstream/handle/1811/87627/Becca_Finkes_Final_Thesis.pdf.
 
Fishman, Robert (1989). ''Bourgeois Utopias.''
 
Foscarinis, Maria.<sup>1</sup> (1996). "Downward Spiral: Homelessness and Its Criminalization." 14 ''Yale Law & Policy Review''. 1 (1996). <nowiki>https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1288</nowiki>. <sup>1</sup> Executive Director, National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty.<blockquote>''"During the 1980s, efforts to establish a 'right to shelter' defined much of the activism, litigation, and debate about homelessness.18 Now, efforts to criminalize activities associated with homelessness are playing that defining role. This evolution follows the failure to address homelessness adequately, and the inability of shelter alone to do so. The trend toward criminalization threatens a further spiraling of minimal aspiration and standard from a cot in a shelter to a spot on the street. At the same time, much of the debate it has sparked presumes a polarity between the 'public's' interest in orderly public places and homeless persons' "'ight' to sleep and beg in public.'<nowiki/>''
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Lagdameo, Jennifer Baum. "How Tiny Pods Are the Future For Portland's Houseless Community." ''Dwell'', August 21, 2017. [https://www.dwell.com/article/how-tiny-pods-are-the-future-for-portlands-houseless-community-657aa4a5. https://www.dwell.com/article/how-tiny-pods-are-the-future-for-portlands-houseless-community-657aa4a5.&nbsp;]
 
Lakeman, Mark, for Dignity Village. (2001). "Dignity Village 2001 and Beyond: Outlining Strategies for a Sustainable Future." http://dignity.scribble.com/proposal/DignityProposal.html.
 
Langan, Celeste. (1995). ''Romantic Vagrancy: Wordsworth and the Simulation of Freedom''. Cambridge University Press, 1995. <nowiki>ISBN 9780521035101</nowiki>.
 
Larson, Jane E. (2002). "Informality, Illegality, and Inequality." 20 ''Yale Law & Policy Review'' 137. (2002).
 
Lewis, David G. (2016). "Houses of the Oregon Tribes." NDNHistory Research, December 31 2016. <nowiki>https://ndnhistoryresearch.com/2016/12/31/houses-of-the-oregon-tribes/</nowiki>.
 
Liccardo, Sam. (2020). Comments in "Reaching the Peak," in interactive Q&A with the mayors of San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose, and a UCSF doctor. ABC 7 News (Bay Area), April 16, 2020. h[https://abc7ne.ws/34Gydvn ttps://abc7ne.ws/34Gydvn]. (video also at <nowiki>https://www.facebook.com/57427307078/videos/555368625125184</nowiki>).  At 16:40, and?<blockquote>''Discussing San Jose government's plan to use emergency funding [including FEMA, I think] to build non-congregate shelters that are durable, prefab structures, to provide transitional housing both immediately and longer-term.''</blockquote>
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___. (2009). "A brief history of the Out of the Doorways campaign, part one." Street Roots, 6 Dec 2009.<br /> https://news.streetroots.org/2009/12/06/brief-history-out-doorways-campaign-part-one. &nbsp;
 
Taylor, Nicholas. (1973). The Village in the City. London: Maurice Temple Smith Ltd, 1973. <nowiki>ISBN 0851170110</nowiki>. Available for loan from Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/villageincity00tayl/.
 
Teige, Karel (1932).&nbsp;''The Minimum Dwelling''. 1932.&nbsp;
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Urban Land Institute. "Deal Profile: Jolene's First Cousin." ULI. https://casestudies.uli.org/deal-profile-jolenes-first-cousin/. Undated, accessed 18 November 2019.&nbsp;
 
Uvedale Price. "Essay on Architecture and Buildings." in ''Essays on the Picturesque'', 1794.
 
Vail K (2016). "Saving the American Dream: The Legalization of the Tiny House Movement." ''U.Louisville L.Rev.'' 54: 357. http://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/branlaj54&div=18&g_sent=1&collection=journals.
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Walker, Lester (2000). ''A Little House of My Own: 47 Grand Designs for 47 Tiny Houses''. 2000. [? check for earlier edition]
 
Wacquant, Loïc. “Designing Urban Seclusion in the Twenty-First Century: The 2009 Roth-Symonds Lecture." ''Perspecta'', vol. 43, 2010, pp. 164–175. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/41680282.<blockquote>''"We can then distribute the ideal-typical forms of sociospatial seclusion in the two-dimensional space defined by those two axes (see Figure 1): elective versus forced, at I the top or at the bottom. Looking at the top right-hand side quadrant, on the choice side and high in social and physical space, you find those people who choose isolation and seek privacy, who wish to be among the likes of themselves or to avoid debased populations and unsavory activities. This is self -seclusion at the top fueled by in-group orientation is represented by elite enclaves or traditional upper-class districts in the city....So at the top you find noble activities, exercised by powerful persons, endowed with the material and symbolic capital to exclude others and to self-seclude, while at the bottom are bunched up ignoble activities and tainted populations deprived of economic and cultural capital, the dispossessed and the dishonored."''
 
''"The prosecutorial approach commonly adopted by social analysts has prevented them from recognizing that the ghetto is a two-faced contraption: it is at once and inseparably an instrument of subordination and a conduit for protection, ! unification, and cohesion. We must be alert to the hidden and counterintuitive benefits of ghettoization, which offers a subordinate ethnoracial category a vehicle for self-organization and mobilization and thence allows them to leverage their 'power from below.'" [referring to argument of his forthcoming book '' The Two Faces of the Ghetto''].''</blockquote>Ward, Colin.&nbsp;''Housing: An Anarchist Approach&nbsp;''(1976).&nbsp;https://libcom.org/library/colin-ward-housing-anarchist-approach. &nbsp;
 
Ward, Colin.&nbsp;''Talking Houses.&nbsp;''(London: Freedom House, 1990).&nbsp;
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Ward, Peter (1999). ''Colonias and Public Policy in Texas and Mexico: Urbanization by Stealth.''&nbsp;(Austin: University of Texas Press, 1999).<br /> ["describes how a two-tier system of housing regulations was gradually codified by the state in Mexico, leading to the legitimization of sub-optimal informal housing for the poor."].
 
Ward, Peter, ed. (1982). ''Self-Help Housing: A Critique.'' &nbsp;London: Mansell Publishing Limited / Alexandrine Press. (Part 1 PDF: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1fVAaoGaDpIc7lrR1qqf6t3CxofEjn0N7/view?usp=sharing).
 
Ward, Peter (2012). "Self-Help Housing Ideas and Practice in the Americas. "In book: ''Planning Ideas That Matter: Livability, Territoriality, Governance and Reflective Practice''. Chapter: Chapter 11. Publisher: MIT Press, Editors: Bish Sanyal, Lawrence Vale, Christina Rosen, pp.283-310. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/277589974_Self-Help_Housing_Ideas_and_Practice_in_the_Americas.