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"The Organizer's Guide to Architecture Education serves as a timely call-to-action for transforming architecture education to meet the monumental environmental and social challenges of our time. Written by a collective of eight educators, practitioners, and organizers and structured in three parts, the book considers organizing across four scales of architecture education and reorients architecture toward stewarding the planetary commons. It speaks to students, faculty, and administrators in architectureschools, as well as professional architects and built environment practitioners, who recognize the need to expand and decenter the discipline. Readers will gain critical understandings and skills for reimagining architectural pedagogy, practice, and relations to power structures. Empowered by this knowledge, readers will be motivated to contribute actively to and drive systemic change within the field. Illuminated with how-to methods-from power mapping to conversation tactics-and case study precedents, the book catalyzes a collective redefinition of architecture as a vital player in building a socially just and ecologically regenerative future"--

The Organizer's Guide to Architecture Education serves as a timely call-to-action for transforming architecture education to meet the monumental environmental and social challenges of our time.



The Organizer’s Guide to Architecture Education

serves as a timely call-to-action for transforming architecture education to meet the monumental environmental and social challenges of our time.

Written by a collective of eight educators, practitioners, and organizers and structured in three parts, the book considers organizing across four scales of architecture education and reorients architecture toward stewarding the planetary commons. It speaks to students, faculty, and administrators in architecture schools, as well as professional architects and built environment practitioners, who recognize the need to expand and decenter the discipline. Readers will gain critical understandings and skills for reimagining architectural pedagogy, practice, and relations to power structures. Empowered by this knowledge, readers will be motivated to contribute actively to and drive systemic change within the field.

Illuminated with how-to methods—from power mapping to conversation tactics—and case study precedents, the book catalyzes a collective redefinition of architecture as a vital player in building a socially just and ecologically regenerative future.

Part 1: Organizing Part 2: The Scales of Organizing Architecture
Education Part 3: Toward the Planetary CODA Coauthoring: An Experimental
Endeavor
Kirsten Day (she/her) is an architect and lecturer in Architecture (Technology and Practice) at the University of Melbourne, Australia.

Peggy Deamer (she/her) is Professor Emerita, Yale School of Architecture and a founding member of the Architecture Lobby.

Andrea Dietz (she/her) is an architect-educator whose research-based practice focuses on the culture and politics of space and its representations.

Tessa Forde (she/they) is an architecture researcher, teacher, and practitioner in Aotearoa New Zealand, interested in the redeployment of architectures tools.

Jessica Garcia Fritz (she/her) is an Assistant Professor of Architecture at the University of Minnesota, and a citizen of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe (Itazipco).

Palmyra Geraki (she/her) is an interdisciplinary architect, educator, and editor, interested in the tensions and opportunities present in the relationship between the individual and the collective.

Valérie (Val) Lechźne (she/they) is a systems change agent, technologist, and a trained-architect based in Brooklyn, NY, USA.