For whom?
Exploring landscape design as a political project
Papers
A retreat critique: Deliberations on design and ethics in the flood zone
Lizzie Yarina, Miho Mazereeuw and Larisa Ovalles
From novel to relational: An approach to care for relational landscapes
Sara Jacobs
Gardening as geopolitics
Kenny Cupers
Nature’s offensive: The sociobiological theory and practice of
Louis Van der Swaelmen Koenraad Danneels
Computational pastoralism
Susan Herrington and David Zielnicki
Under the Sky
Transit
Kristof Vrancken
Thinking Eye
Revisiting the High Line as sociopolitical project
Greet De Block, Vera Vicenzotti, Lisa Diedrich
Beyond appearances: Community activism and New York City’s High Line
Diane E. Davis and Stephen F. Gray
When urban greening becomes an accumulation strategy: Exploring the ecological, social and economic calculus of the High Line
Natalie Gulsrud and Henriette Steiner
Book Reviews
Overgrown: Practices between Landscape Architecture and Gardening
Review by Thierry Kandjee
The End of Landscape in Nineteenth-Century America
Review by William L. Coleman
Natura: Environmental Aesthetics after Landscape
Review by Zanna Mae Matson
The Fabric of Space: Water, Modernity and the Urban Imagination
Review by Kelly Shannon
Conference Review
ECLAS Conference 2019: Lessons from the past, visions for the future: Celebrating 100 years of landscape architecture education in Europe
Review by Maria Beatrice Andreucci