EOAS Planetary Stewardship Lecture

Date

Oct 22 2019
Expired!

Time

6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

Location

Rutgers Academic Bldg (East) -- Room 2400
15 Seminary Pl. New Brunswick, NJ 08901
A recording of this event is available here.

View of NYC

Design and the Green New Deal

I don’t know when the myth of landscape architects as climate saviors began, but I know it’s time to kill it. Design is an instrument of power, not an agent of change. For too long, designers have relied upon the mythology of a lone genius, working tirelessly and alone, to solve the existential crises of their day. But these theories of change, predicated on the existence of a great man or woman, misunderstand the way that power is structured and change is made. Can a set of practices tied to luxury real estate and urban development deliver anything meaningful to the frontline communities of climate change? Can we act both as instruments of neoliberalism and as an activist, subversive force in the fight for climate justice?

These questions are at the heart of the movement driving the Green New Deal. Though it has necessarily been led by economists, scientists, and organizers, the Green New Deal is also the biggest design and environmental idea in a century. It’s primary aims—to decarbonize the economy and adapt the entire nation to climate change—would require a total transformation of the built and natural environment, including the construction of a new clean energy grid, the maximal energy efficient retrofit of every structure, the managed retreat of tens of millions of people, and a massive reorganization of land use at a national scale. We have to build so much, so fast, and so much better than we’ve ever done before. And the Green New Deal is the only idea on the table that might make this possible.

So what would a world designed by the Green New Deal look like? How can designers find their way into this movement? That’s what this lecture will be about.


About the Speaker

Billy FlemingDr. Billy Fleming is the Wilks Family Director of the Ian L. McHarg Center for Urbanism and Ecology in the Stuart Weitzman School of Design. He is the co-editor and co-curator of Design With Nature Now (2019), the co-editor of The Adaptation Blueprint (2021), the co-author of The Indivisible Guide (2016), and the author of Drowning America (Penn Press, 2020). Before joining Penn, he worked as policy adviser in the White House Domestic Policy Council’s office of Urban Affairs. Billy is a graduate of the University of Arkansas Fay Jones School of Architecture, the University of Texas School of Architecture, and the University of Pennsylvania School of Design. He’s a first-generation college graduate and lives in Philadelphia with his perfect dog and chonky cat.


Additional Information

This event is open to Rutgers faculty, staff, students, alumni, and the general public.

Registration for this event is not required but strongly recommended.

If you are not affiliated with Rutgers University, you must register your vehicle prior to attending this lecture or you may receive a citation. Parking for this event will be permitted in Lots 26, 30, and the College Ave Deck. If you are affiliated with Rutgers University, you still must park in your designated lots.  Vehicle registration can be found here. 

For questions about this event, please contact Ken Eng at keng@marine.rutgers.edu or by phone at 848-932-3280.


This event is sponsored by the Institute of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences in coordination with the Eagleton Institute of Politics and the Department of Landscape Architecture in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences.

Date

Oct 22 2019
Expired!

Time

6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

Organizer

Institute of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences
Website
http://eoas.rutgers.edu

Co-Sponsors

Dept of Landscape Architecture
Website
http://landarch.rutgers.edu/
Eagleton Institute of Politics
Website
https://eagleton.rutgers.edu/

Location

Rutgers Academic Bldg (East) -- Room 2400
15 Seminary Pl. New Brunswick, NJ 08901
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