We are excited to announce that on Saturday February 22 at 2:30 Emily McCoy, Kofi Boone and Ben Monette will be presenting on the topic: Integrating Natural Processes into the City Fabric of the Global American South at the Cities, Rivers, and Cultures of Change: Rethinking and Restoring the Environments of the Global American South Conference. The conference is presented by UNC Center for Global Initiatives on Friday, February 21, 2014 at 2:00 PM - Saturday, February 22, 2014 at 6:00 PM (EST), in Chapel Hill, NC. Emily, Ben, and Kofi will be presenting in the Nelson Mandela Auditorium on UNC Chapel Hill's campus.
You can register here:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/cities-rivers-and-cultures-of-change-rethinking-and-restoring-the-environments-of-the-global-registration-10017912847
Below is an abstract of their presentation...we hope to see you all there!
"Urban
 growth structures and patterns in the Global South are influenced by 
any number of interconnected macro and micro pressures, functions, and 
changes.  While a vast swath of the southeast, and to some extent the 
southwest, continue to undergo rapid growth, a subset of cities in the 
northeast (primarily the rustbelt cities) have experienced, and continue
 to experience, a significant decline in population.
In
 many rust-belt cities, vacant and abandoned structures, polluted post 
industrial sites, decaying above ground infrastructure, shrinking tax 
bases, and a combined water and sewer system contribute to a cycle of 
urban atrophy.  These cities are engaged in a life and death struggle 
where urban planners, legislators, business owners, and citizens fight 
for the survival their communities.  To that end, there are creative, 
adaptive solutions that build on existing strengths and look to leverage
 government mandates for positive growth.
Among
 these strategies is a move towards green infrastructure.  In an 
adaptation of the EPA’s definition, green infrastructure can be 
described as a storm water management 
approach that uses vegetation, soils, and natural or engineered 
processes to manage water and create healthier urban environments4.
Research
 is currently underway to test, in particular, the engineered systems so
 that we can build a greener city in a quantifiable and rational 
manner.  By taking a holistic approach to post occupancy evaluation of 
green infrastructure sites in cities like Philadelphia PA, we can begin 
to examine efficacy of both the physical as well as the social 
performance of these places.  The interplay of functional systems with 
social use is the true bellwether for how we determine success or 
failure.
The
 thin line between these designations when viewed from a visitor, 
citizen, or neighbor’s perspective can shift and perhaps fray under the 
weight of social equity and economic reality.  Even if we can dream a 
plan to life, and get it to function according to design, we continually
 ask ourselves: are we ignoring the fair treatment of all citizens?  
Does everyone enjoy equal access to open space, protection from health 
hazards?  Is every citizen, regardless of race, ethnicity, or income 
level able to participate in decision making processes?
These
 questions of environmental justice provide the final thread to the 
urban growth dynamic.   Its impacts are relevant across scales of 
humankind and are the meter with which we must test our planning and design efforts if our goal is to 
construct a healthier and more diverse future. Looking across these scales and into the “interstices of cities”1
 to provide meaningful canvasses for ecosystem services and stages for 
cultural narratives, we present conceptual, in-progress, and built case 
studies that marry natural resource management with community building 
efforts. These studies not only assist communities in-need, but provide 
opportunity for a place to “adapt to what already existed.”2
What
 is clear from these studies is that enacting strategies to improve 
urban life can no longer be encapsulated into one discipline’s goals, 
one realm of implementation, one type of people, or viewed from one 
scale3. The leveraging of opportunities in an effort to 
facilitate sustainable development within the urban form, design and 
planning strategies must involve the equal pursuance of social, 
economical and environmental viability with thoughtful attention to 
qualitative detail."
WORKS CITED
1 Leslie Jones Sauer. The Once and Future Forest: A Guide to Forest Restoration Strategies. (Washington, DC: Island Press, 1998).
2  Rem Koolhaus. “Toward the Contemporary City”. Theorizing a New Agenda for Architecture. (New York, NY Princeton Architectural Press, 1996)
3  Anne Whiston Spirn, “Restoring Mill Creek: Landscape Literacy, Environmental Justice and City Planning and Design, Landscape Research, v.30 no.5, 393‐413, July 2005
4 EPA Website. “What is Green Infrastructure” http://water.epa.gov/ infrastructure/ greeninfrastructure/gi_what. cfm

This natural process has effectiveness in our daily life because we see them in our daily routine but never think about it.
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