Resources
This tool from CDLI (published in 2020) addresses common pitfalls of equity practice. As two women BIPOC urban planners from community organizing backgrounds, Lily Song and Allentza Michel noticed increasing attention and resources devoted to issues of “equity” by decision makers and funders with less thought given to critical debate and reflective practice. They created “Just don’t! Common pitfalls of equity practice and how to avoid them” as a challenge to themselves and fellow planning and design professionals to do better– by actively confronting and learning from tensions and conflicts in our work.
Download the zine here, or the two page version for screens here.
Design Studio First Aid Kit is a starter set of Who? What? When? Where? Why? How? questions to guide efforts to combat white supremacy and intersecting oppressions within the design studio. This 2020 CDLI project by Dr. Lily Song was informed by teaching and learning experiences from GSD studios and workshops as well as conversations with fellow designers, planners, organizers and activists.
Download the full zine here: CoDesignFirstAidKit_Zine
Or the two-page document for screens here: DesignStudioFirstAidKit
Principles:
- Riccio, R., G. Mecagni, and B. Berkey. “Principles of anti-oppressive community engagement for university educators and researchers. Northeastern University Social Impact Lab White Paper.” (2022): 2837.
- Song, Lily. “Notes from the Anti-Displacement Studio.” The Radical Teacher 128 (2024): 49-59.
References about displacement drivers and effects:
- Displacement Explainer Video, Urban Displacement Project
- Legacy of Redlining, Urban Displacement Project
- https://evictionlab.org/why-eviction-matters/#eviction-facts
- How the real estate financial model is harming us by Leilani Farha, TEDxQueensU
- Everything You Need to Know About the New Economy | Robert Reich
- Jennings, James, Bob Terrell, Jen Douglas, Kalila Barnett, and Ashley E. Harding. “Understanding Gentrification and Displacement: Community Voices and Changing Neighborhoods.” Boston: Alternatives for Communities & Environment (2016)