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_cAIKTC-KRRC
100 _913340
_a Editors, A R
245 _aAR October 2020 on Land
250 _a5 October 2020
260 _aLondon
_bEMAP Publishing Limited
_c2020
520 _a‘Land’, as Brenna Bhandar writes at the start of this issue’s keynote, ‘remains mired in a racial, colonial ideology of improvement.’ Notions of ownership and belonging, of construction and production, and all that make up the knotted web of layers and connotations associated with the word ‘land’ both express the colonial structures that underpin our understanding of the world and exert that coloniality back upon the world. This issue begins to pull at the threads that weave these brutal logics into earth, bringing to the fore stories from Mongolia, Palestine, South Africa, Vietnam, France, and Sweden that help us challenge our understanding of the ground we stand on. The same structures that underpin the inequity in land relations must also be unbuilt in our pages and in our own editorial practice. As lockdowns were tentatively lifted and restrictions eased, we have been able to visit a few buildings and publish them in this issue. But rather than viewing this as a return to normal, to the comfort of old ways, we are committed to evolving – gradually, critically and continuously – the way we work and the traces we leave on the world. Read more about how we are working on our editorial practice
650 0 _971
_aARCHITECTURE GENERAL (AR-GEN)
773 0 _tArchitectural review
_x0003-861X
_dLondon EMAP Publishing Limited
856 _uhttps://www.architectural-review.com/magazines/ar-october-2020-on-land
_yClick here
942 _2ddc
_cAR