Human Rights Initiative Lecture
The March of Humanitarianism: 'Clooneyal' Visibilities and the Fragmentation of the Sudan
Amal Hassan Fadlalla
Associate Professor ofWomen's Studies, Anthropology, and Afroamerican and African Studies
The March of Humanitarianism: 'Clooneyal' Visibilities and the Fragmentation of the Sudan
Friday, March 15 2-4pm Kalamazoo Room, Michigan League
At the start of the 21st century, conventional approaches to understanding transnational urbanism and the contemporary modern metropolis have become unsettled. The unprecedented hyper-growth of the sprawling mega-cities of the (so-called) Global South, coupled with the proliferation of post-industrial “shrinking cities” in the core areas of the world economy, has fundamentally altered the pace and form of global urbanism. Yet the dominant theories used to study cities remain largely tied to the urban experience of a handful of leading world-class cities of Europe and North America. There is a growing interest in re-conceptualizing the field of urban toward a less-deductive theoretical openness that seeks through comparison and contrast to account for the historical-spatial specificity of those cities which are “off the map.”
Associate Professor ofWomen's Studies, Anthropology, and Afroamerican and African Studies
The March of Humanitarianism: 'Clooneyal' Visibilities and the Fragmentation of the Sudan
Friday, March 15 2-4pm Kalamazoo Room, Michigan League
At the start of the 21st century, conventional approaches to understanding transnational urbanism and the contemporary modern metropolis have become unsettled. The unprecedented hyper-growth of the sprawling mega-cities of the (so-called) Global South, coupled with the proliferation of post-industrial “shrinking cities” in the core areas of the world economy, has fundamentally altered the pace and form of global urbanism. Yet the dominant theories used to study cities remain largely tied to the urban experience of a handful of leading world-class cities of Europe and North America. There is a growing interest in re-conceptualizing the field of urban toward a less-deductive theoretical openness that seeks through comparison and contrast to account for the historical-spatial specificity of those cities which are “off the map.”
Building: | Michigan League |
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Website: | |
Event Type: | Lecture / Discussion |
Tags: | george clooney, human rights, humanitarianism, international, sudan |
Source: | Happening @ Michigan from International Institute, Donia Human Rights Center |