Village Buildings bibliography: Difference between revisions

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*Glaser, Gary. ''Justiceville – L.A.'s Homeless City''&nbsp;(film recording) 1987.&nbsp;[https://www.cctv.org/watch-tv/programs/justiceville-–-las-homeless-city https://www.cctv.org/watch-tv/programs/justiceville-%E2%80%93-las-homeless-city].<br/> &nbsp;
*Gragg, Randy. "Guerrilla City." ''Architecture'', May 2002.&nbsp;<br/> [https://saveferalhumanhabitat.wordpress.com/2002/12/27/guerrilla-city-a-homeless-settlement-in-portland-has-its-own-government-urban-plan-and-skyline/ https://saveferalhumanhabitat.wordpress.com/2002/12/27/guerrilla-city-a-homeless-settlement-in-portland-has-its-own-government-urban-plan-and-skyline/].&nbsp;<br/> &nbsp; &nbsp; “In its ‘permasite’ configuration, Dignity Village could potentially be a working model for a new type of truly sustainable, high density and mixed use, organically developing urban village model. If developed according to Dignity Villages wishes, the village would enhance Portland’s reputation as being the most green city in America. ... Dignity Village hopes to become a demonstration site for solar and wind power, permaculture, environmental restoration, stormwater and greywater reuse and innovative use of recycled materials and alternative building techniques for construction.”<br/> &nbsp;
*Grant, Elizabeth, and Kelly Greenop, Albert L. Refiti, Daniel J. Glenn, eds (2018). ''The Handbook of Contemporary Indigenous Architecture''. Springer, 2018. E-ISBN 9789811069048.<br /> &nbsp;
*Gregory, J. (1989). ''American Exodus: The Dustbowl Migration and Okie Culture in California''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://www.google.com/books/edition/American_Exodus/qNdtGwnXYrIC?hl=en&gbpv=1. <br /> &nbsp;
*Grenell, Peter (1972). "Planning for Invisible People: Some Consequences of Bureaucratic Values and Practices." In [Turner & Fichtel, eds, ''Freedom to Build'', 1972].&nbsp;<br/> Grenell notes in footnote "I am indebted to Cora Du Bois, Zemurray Professor of Anthropology at Harvard University (retired), for introducing me to the term 'invisible people.'"&nbsp;<br/> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;''"Both countries have severe housing problems in spite of the United States' great wealth and India's surfeit of manpower. Leaders of both nations believe these problems can be solved through modern technology and organization if sufficient resources are available. A fundamental consequence of this optimistic view is an underestimation of the variability and complexity of human needs, and also of the great resource represented by the people themselves....The result of these attitudes and their underlying values is to make people seem 'invisible' to those persons -- chiefly members of large bureaucratic organizations -- whose professed task is to serve them. It is only when invisible people have made their presence felt, through political agitation or sheer force of numbers, that governments have been compelled to recognize their existence and to institute new or revised goals and programs. This is as true in India with its islands of affluence amidst a sea of poverty, as it is in the United States with its pockets of poverty in almost university plenty."&nbsp;''<br/> &nbsp;
*Groth, Paul. Living Downtown: The History of Residential Hotels in the United States. Berkeley: &nbsp;University of California Press, &nbsp;c1994 1994. [http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft6j49p0wf/ http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft6j49p0wf/]. &nbsp;Full text available in UC Press E-Books Collection.&nbsp;<br/> &nbsp;