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Aftab Erfan PhD 2013

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Current Work:  Instructor, SCARP; Consultant, Whole Picture Thinking.

One of the most interesting things about a career in planning is that it can take many twists and turns. I came to SCARP in 2008, with a Masters in Urban Planning (McGill University), having worked as an environmental planner in a large consulting firm, and as a long-range planner in municipal government. By the time I got here my main interest was in the processes by which large and diverse groups of people make decisions that affect them collectively, particularly in the context of a significant history of conflict. How could planners play a facilitative leadership role in enabling dialogue that was attentive to difference and made a difference in how communities address their most pressing issues?

My PhD dissertation ended up being focused around an action research project with a small First Nation community on Vancouver Island. I worked with community members attempting to break the cycle of intergenerational trauma and rebuild the social fabric of their reserve - and I wrote up my account of this “experiment in therapeutic planning”. 

My time at SCARP was stimulating largely because of scholarly and professional connections that my supervisor and other faculty members facilitated. I was inspired and supported by other PhD students in my cohort, and energized by the excellent Masters students that the SCARP program attracts. I found the curriculum rigorous and flexible, allowing me to craft a very unique space for myself not only to engage in scholarship but actually to build a specialized set of practitioner skills in facilitating dialogue and working with conflict. I trained with a mentor –a master facilitator- outside the program and travelled around the world to hone my skills.

I was not a typical PhD student and I don’t feel like a typical academic, but the SCARP program set me up beautifully for what I eventually discovered I wanted to become: a scholar-practitioner. I currently divide my time between teaching, writing (on my own time), and running a successful solo consulting business that utilizes my facilitation skills in very exciting ways <www.wholepicturethinking.com>. My consulting work takes me into a more diverse set of contexts than I had ever imagined: First Nation communities, non-profits, social ventures and small businesses, large corporations, and governments at every level. The SCARP doctoral program has been an indispensible stepping-stone for getting to this place and for wherever I happen to go next.  


Becky Tarbotton Memorial Scholarship

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Becky Tarbotton was an exceptional SCARP student, a highly successful alumna, a wonderful human being and a passionate champion of environmental and social justice. She passed away three years ago at the age of 39. 

Becky's family and close friends, in conjunction with SCARP, are setting up a scholarship in her name. The goal is to raise $90,000 so that we can award $3,000 annually to a student who shares Becky's vision for the planet and who strives for transformative change. We are already almost half way towards that goal and we hope to offer the first scholarship in the fall of 2016.

If you are interested in learning more about Becky, or contributing to the scholarship fund, please take a moment to go to http://beckytarbottonscholarship.org/

Planning Canada: A Case Study Approach - New book from Ren Thomas

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SCARP Alumnus Ren Thomas has written a new book that includes a range of practice and research based cases in eight areas: community and social planning, urban form and public health, natural resource management, housing, participatory processes, urban design, urban redevelopment, and transportation and infrastructure planning. They include examples from urban, rural, and Aboriginal communities across the country.

Planning Canada: A Case Study Approach is intended to introduce undergraduate students in planning, geography, and urban studies to the planning discipline in Canada, but the case studies offer enough depth to be used in graduate courses as well.

Dr. Thomas received her PhD from SCARP in 2011, she is a researcher and writer and Principal of Ren Thomas Urban Research & Consulting. Dr. Thomas is currently a visiting professor at the University of Oregon.

 

 

 


ISBN 9780199008070
456 pp.
© 2016

Planning Canada
A Case Study Approach

 

Ren Thomas

 

 

"It is high time for a new Canadian urban planning text.... This book is well thought out in terms of engaging undergraduate students." 
                                    —Meg Holden, Simon Fraser University

 



 


Features

  • Written by a combination of academics and professionals, this is the first text of its kind to merge the two worlds for an undergraduate audience.
  • Abundant case studies explore a variety of inspiring research studies and planning projects that have been carried out across Canada, providing insight into innovative approaches, plans, and solutions developed by Canadian planners.
  • Practical approach introduces students to planning as a profession, and highlights key projects and the types of opportunities that are available in the field.
  • In-depth treatment of key issues affecting Canadian cities and regions—including urban sprawl, immigration and diversity, Aboriginal rights, vulnerability and risk assessment, and climate change—helps students become aware of the vast range of social and geographic challenges shaping planning decisions in Canada today.


To consider Planning Canada: A Case Study Approachor another great OUP title for your upcoming courses, please contact your local Oxford University Press Sales Representative or email sales.hed.ca@oup.com.

Please include the following information in your message: course code/name,
estimated enrolment, current book in use, and the course start date.

 

 

Oxford University Press Canada
8 Sampson Mews, Suite 204
Don Mills, ON M3C 0H5
sales.hed.ca@oup.com

Eric Fox Presents at the 2016 Active Living Research Conference in Florida

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by Maria Trujillo 

On February 1st, 2016, Eric Fox, 2015 graduate of the SCARP master’s program presented a poster on his recent research examining the relationship between workplace neighbourhood environment, physical activity and healthy living at the 2016 Active Living Research (ALR) Conference in Clearwater Beach, FL. The ALR Conference, held annually in the U.S., is a premier public health and planning venue that brings together internationally recognized researchers and practitioners in the field. Eric Fox was joined at the conference by his supervisor and Professor in Sustainable Transport at SCARP, Dr. Larry Frank, who presented on recent UBC research from a  Study of Travel, Health and Activity Patterns along the Comox-Helmcken Greenway  

Eric Fox presented recent findings from his SCARP capstone project analyzing the built environment around participants’ worksite locations and examining them in relation to participants’ health outcomes including moderate-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and sedentary time spent in automobiles. A core objective of the study was to demonstrate that work environments which better enable active transportation and transit use are more supportive of healthy living and thereby help to reduce sedentary behaviour.    

 

PHOTO: SCARP graduate Eric Fox (left), Dr. Jim Sallis (center), Program Director of ALR and Professor of Family & Preventive Medicine at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) and Dr. Larry Frank (right), Professor in Sustainable Transport at SCARP and Director of the Health & Community Design Lab at the School of Population & Public Health at UBC.

New Book Makes Planning Accessibile to Students from all Disciplines

SCARP Book Will Appeal to a Large Audience

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On June 17th, School of Community and Regional Planning alumni, students, and faculty gathered at the UBC Bookstore to launch the new comprehensive planning book, Planning Canada: A Case Study Approach, edited by SCARP PhD Alumna Ren Thomas. Various contributing authors were present at the launch to answer questions and discuss their specific contributions to the book, which features over thirty planning case studies.

Moderating the panel was SCARP Adjunct Professor and Spacing Vancouver Editor-in-Chief, Erick Villagomez, who spoke to the book’s important and unique contribution to planning knowledge, in being the first planning book to use a case study approach with Canadian precedents. In order to allow the audience to get a better understanding of the book, the panel discussion and questions were organized around some key themes present in the book: Engagement and Dialogue with Marginalized Groups, Public Engagement Across the Larger City and at Smaller Scale of Development, Unique Planning Cases, and Planning for the Future.

 The discussion began with an introduction by Ren Thomas, who mentioned that the book is intended to be for anyone interested in planning. As Thomas stated, the target audience for the book is not only planning students, but planning enthusiasts and non-experts that seek to have a better comprehensive understanding of planning successes and issues in Canada. Non-planning students should be able to pick up the book and have a better understanding of planning in Canada after reading it, according to Thomas.

 

The editor also mentioned that the book hopes to build bridges across planning knowledge in Canada. British Columbia, and other provinces in Canada, often achieve many planning innovations and successes—and instructive failures—but too often do not hear about them, and as a consequence, cannot learn from them. By reading the book, planning practitioners across Canada get a better understanding of the different planning process and initiatives happening in the country.

The discussion on the chapters of the book began with SCARP PhD student Magdalena Ugarte, who published a chapter on the Vancouver Dialogues Project, which is a pilot initiative by the Social Planning Department at the City of Vancouver. Using an appreciative-inquiry framework, the Dialogues Project, aimed to bring First Nations, urban Aboriginals and Immigrant communities together to discuss commonalities. Ugarte mentioned that the chapter sought to highlight the emphasis that the city placed on the importance of storytelling in helping to bring people together, and creating a safe space for conversations for marginalized and oppressed groups, while using appreciative-inquiry as an engagement method.

Also present at the event was, John Foster, who published a chapter on Richmond’s Social Development Strategy along with SCARP Professor Leonora Angeles and SCARP Alumna Olga Shcherbyna. Given that Richmond has the highest population of immigrants in Canada, an important planning issue focused on understanding how to create community with a diverse population that speak a variety of languages. In essence: how do we effectively reach out to immigrants? The chapter, itself, outlines the creation and importance of Richmond’s Social Development Strategy in helping to create an accessible and representative social plan for all of Richmond’s diverse populations.

SCARP Director and recent recipient of YWCA Women of Distinction Award, Penny Gurstein, co-authored a chapter with SCARP Alumna Sylvia Vilches, Assistant Professor and Extension Specialist Department of Human Development and Family Studies at Auburn University, looking at the spatial impacts of urban poverty for lone parent, female-headed households in Vancouver. As the presenters mentioned this is an important study, 20% of households belong to lone parents and are a very “stable and enduring makeup of Canadian households.” Although they discussed various interesting issues, one of the most impactful dealt with how this population uses the city. For example, due to limited income, many single female parents move around the city in specific ways, often walking more to food banks, and childcare centres because they cannot afford the bus. Consequently, they also make the most use of our public spaces and do so as an extension of their domestic life, given that their living conditions are often substandard. Ultimately, the discussion highlighted the fact that our understanding of this demographic can, and should, impact how we plan and design our cities.

SCARP Adjunct Professor and former Co-Director of Planning for the City of Vancouver, Ann McAfee, wrote a chapter on Vancouver's renowned CityPlan process. She mentioned that CityPlan emerged from a need to capture all planning issues in one document, while also ensuring that as many people as possible were involved in the process. She spoke of the successes and also difficulties they encountered in undertaking the initiative, which aimed to “Hear about All Issues, Hear From New People, and Hear in New Ways.”

As CityPlan was, at the time of its inception, a pioneering undertaking, Amanda Mitchell and SCARP Alumna Lisa Brideau spoke to more recent innovations at the City of Vancouver: more specifically, how the City engaged the public for the first time using online ideation tools to crowdsource ideas. This was done during the ideas collection phase of the Talk Green To Us campaign, as a part of the Greenest City Action Plan. Although they were clear to emphasize the symbiotic relationship between online and off-line engagement tools, they described one of the best aspects of engaging residents online was that residents could quickly get direct replies to their input.

Switching scales from city-wide to more localized, Leslie Shieh, another SCARP Alumna panelist, spoke about her chapter on public markets and the key functions that make some more successful than others. This was discussed in specific reference to her work on the Westminster Quay Public Market—River Market—revitalization project in New Westminster that began in 2008. The interesting history of the initiative was described, as well as the three functions that defined its success: making it an activities precinct, a supported network of local businesses, and a place for community engagement.

Finally, Timothy Shah, also a former SCARP Alum, spoke to the importance of framing discussions around climate change and planning, by trying to understand the impact that climate change is already having in the community. The particular community highlighted in his case study was Elkford, BC, which Shah described as being a model for adaptive capacity, climate uncertainty, and risk communication. He also spoke of the importance of understanding how to best convey climate change information to the public, which is elaborated on in the chapter.

 

Overall, the event was a success, highlighting the innovative and important planning work that many SCARP faculty, students and alumni have engaged in and researched. It was great to hear about so many planning successes, and instructive failures. I look forward to learning more about these planning scenarios by reading the book; it's definitely on my reading list now!

 - by Maria Trujillo, SCARP Master's student

***

For more information on Planning Canada, visit Oxford University Press website. The book is also now available at the UBC Bookstore or can be purchased online at Amazon.

Read a review of Planning Canada: A Case Study Approach 

 

Carleigh Oude-Reimerink Brings Yoga to YVR

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Carleigh Oude-Reimerink recently graduated from the SCARP Masters of Planning program. Her Masters Professional Project explored the creation of a yoga space for passengers at Vancouver International Airport (YVR). Carleigh spoke with, and surveyed passengers in the terminals at YVR. She also conducted a mapping exercise to determine which locations would be optimal for this type of space. She conducted background research on wellness and yoga, and researched best practices. Carleigh provided a set of recommendations to VYR, some of which include that the space be free, after security checkpoints, with all supplies provided, and to partner with a local yoga studio, such as YYoga. YVR has accepted these recommendations and has gone forward with the creation of this space at YVR. Check out this link: http://www.metronews.ca/news/vancouver/2016/07/12/airport-yoga-in-vancouver-free-for-travellers.html. Carleigh is currently working as a Planning Consultant in Toronto.

 

CBC News

Tue July 12 2016
Link to full text

A New Book by Janice Barry & Libby Porter

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Janice Barry, SCARP PhD graduate (see bio), and SCARP lecturer Libby Porter have penned a new book call Planning for Coexistence? The book discusses land-use planning and indigenous territory claims in Canada and Australia.

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Maureen Mendoza Mentors Filipino Youth

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An article in the Georgia Straight sings the praises of SCARP Masters Grad Maureen Mendoza, co-founder of KAMP, (Kababayan Academic Mentorship Program) that mentors Filipino youth and helps them reach their full potential. Operating out of Charles Tupper high school on the eastside, the program includes academic tutoring, support in learning English, and personal development. Read the full article.

Hindsight's view: Been there, learned that

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SCARP graduates R.J. McCulloch and Megan Faulkner are ready to launch their new online magazine. Working together in the heritage planning/consulting field for the past number of years after graduating from SCARP they are now ready to offer their own perspectives through the production of a new magazine series dedicated to our urban history. Named hindsight, it combines archival photography with analysis and commentary to present a compelling and engaging new way to appreciate the evolution of our cities.

The Kickstarter campaign to help fund the production of the first issue is launching very soon, but in the meantime, they are encouraging planning enthusiasts to visit the website and social media pages.

 

hindsightmag.com

Twitter: @thehindsightmag

Instagram: hindsightmagazine

Facebook: Hindsight Magazine

 

"At the intersection of the past and the future exists hindsight, a periodical review of the urban spaces that have shaped our lives and that we continue to shape. Cities are naturally dynamic and constantly changing and as we contemplate the evolution of our cities, we ask the question, can we do better with what we already have?

Our mandate at hindsight magazine is to study, observe, and research our cities in order to present timely and relevant issues that are facing the urban condition. We will be exploring, especially through archival photography, a variety of topics through this new series and will be comparing and contrasting our cities, allowing us to learn from each other in the hope of delivering a better urban future for citizens and visitors alike."

Jen Roberton says city parks should be for everyone

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SCARP Alum Jen Roberton, now a planner in Toronto, says cities need to plan for people who want to have sex in public parks. Using Amsterdam's Vondelpark as the standard, Roberton says that if a park is truly for all members of the community, then cities have to design their parks to be used by everyone.

 

Listen to Jen Roberton's interview on CBC radio:  http://www.cbc.ca/radio/the180/free-trade-myth-and-reality-sex-in-public-parks-blood-religion-and-bioethics-1.3872754/cities-need-to-plan-for-sex-in-public-parks-1.3874481 

Bill Rees blogs in The Guardian of a grim future

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Bill Rees' blog in The Guardian sees a grim future if humans don't change our view of progress. "Techno-industrial society is in dangerous ecological overshoot", says Rees, who is a SCARP Professor Emeritus and former Director of the school. Bill is best known as the originator of ecological footprint analysis, the world's best-known indicator of the (un)sustainability of techno-industrial society.(www.postcarbon.org/our-people/william-rees/)

To read the full blog: https://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2017/may/22/wealth-redistribution-and-population-management-are-the-only-logical-way-forward?CMP=twt_a-environment_b-gdneco 

 

Jennie Moore, a Woman of Distinction

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SCARP alumna Jennie Moore has won the YWCAs Woman of Distinction for Environmental Sustainability. Jennie is an associate dean of the School of Construction and Environment at BCIT and worked with SCARP's Bill Rees when she was a graduate student at SCARP. 

For more on her nomination as a Woman if Distinction in Environmental Sustainability see: https://ywcavan.org/node/2981 

 

SCARP Alumni Gather at CIP Conference

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SCARP alumni gathered at a reception hosted by the School at the Canadian Institute of Planners Conference held June 17-20 in Calgary. The theme of this year's conference was Building Resilience, and forum for discussions about the challenges facing our cities in the future.

SCARP students presented on Implementing the UN New Urban Agenda in Canada: issues, opportunities and responsibilities. The conference program read:

  • "Last October, United Nations member nations, including Canada, adopted the New Urban Agenda (NUA) at the Habitat III Quito conference. Reflecting broad input from many groups including planning associations, the NUA is a collective vision and a political commitment to sustainable urban development of socially inclusive, economically prosperous, and environmentally resilient cities. The panel will engage the planning community in discussion of how this powerful, international aspirational document can be used to advance planning in Canada. Presentations will focus on potential implementation strategies, including: a national urban policy, housing as a human right, ecosystem thinking, improving precarious and informal work environments, strengthening citizen participation, and the ‘right to the city.’"    Speakers: Elizabeth Ballantyne, Robert Catherall, Penny Gurstein, Kathleen Heggie, Allison Lasocha, Eleanor Mohammed.

Other SCARP participants included:

  • Kathryn Lennon: Food for Thought: Urban Agriculture and Resiliency
  • Penny Gurstein: Partnerships for Affordable and  Resilient Housing: Lessons from Calgary & Vancouver
  • George Benson, Cristyn Edwards, Shirin Karoubi, Anna Zhuo: Preparing the Planning Profession for Climate Migrants

 

Ren Thomas receives CIP Award of Merit


Alumna receives grant to teach woodworking to youth

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SCARP Alumna Shirin Karoubi is the executive director of Toolbox, a program designed to challenge gender stereotypes and encourage the building of healthy relationships between girls, gender nonconforming youth, and boys. It will also support the development of self sufficiency and confidence at a young age. The program will be led by women identifying who have a background in woodworking, metalwork, and electronics, as well as experience training youths in these skills.

Toolbox has received the Youth Opportunity Fund Grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation which will fund the program for the next three years. Karoubi says they are working towards turning Toolbox into a free school for the community, East Scarborough, as well as a social enterprise that would allow them to function without grants or donations.

Here is their website: toolboxinitiative.com.  A promotional video will be posted in mid-October.

To read the full story:  http://ose.utsc.utoronto.ca/ose/story.php?id=9540

Shirin Karoubi graduated from SCARP in 2016 with a Master of Arts in Planning.

 

Pat Carney publishes short story collection

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SCARP alum Pat Carney has published a collection of short stories called: On Island, Life Among the Coast Dwellers

ON ISLAND has topped the BC Bestseller list for the year 2017 by the Association of BC Booksellers.

Ms. Carney writes: "These fictional stories of anonymous characters living on unnamed islands or on the coast describe the ebb and flow of life in coastal communities and are being claimed by many readers as their own. While characters are fictional , most events occurred somewhere, sometime, to someone."

A former canadian senator, Pat was presented with a Faculty of Applied Science Dean's Medal of Distinction in 2017 for her work as a journalist and politician. In 1990 she received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from UBC. 

When Pat graduated from SCARP, her master's thesis topic was "... to explore the role of communications in planning and to suggest the design specifications and constraints for a social communications delivery system which will enable planners to cope with the demands of an "information ecology" (Nanus, 1972, p.398) or environment characterized by increasing flows of information and complexity of information systems..."

Pat Carney receives her Doctor of Laws degree from UBC.

 

In Memoriam - Kamala Rao

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In Memoriam - Kamala Rao (October 30, 1972 - June 27, 2018)

 

Kamala Shanthi Rao was a loving partner and mother, caring friend and a passionate and conscientious planner. Born and raised in Alaska, Kamala’s love of the outdoors began early in life. She was an avid climber, back country skier and camper and cyclist. Kamala would continue her love of the outdoors while living in Oregon, Colorado, Washington State and later settling in British Columbia.

 

As a woman of mixed-race, Kamala seamlessly celebrated both her Indian and North American heritage, wearing a stunning red sari for her wedding, challenging friends to multicultural cooking contests, and celebrating her love affair with the Pacific Northwest’s IPAs.

 

Kamala completed a Bachelor of Science degree in physics at the University of Oregon (1996) and a Master of Science at University of British Columbia’s School of Community and Regional Planning (2004) with a focus on transportation planning.

 

Those who were part of Kamala’s cohort at graduate school experienced an intelligent colleague who spoke eloquently about planning issues facing society today. She will also be remembered fondly as one of the best theme party organizers and costumers ever - the reason many of us still have wigs lying around… just in case!

 

Her passion for transportation planning and the public realm was confirmed in her thesis for SCARP titled, “Alaskan Way: Viaduct Replacement Project.” This foundational work and her experiences with the outdoors instilled a keen sense of environmentalism that would carry forward in her volunteer work as board chair of Sightline Institute - working at the intersection of environmental health and social justice; as well as her work as a board member of the Peoples’ Waterfront Coalition to reclaim Seattle’s highway waterfront as a place for people.

 

Kamala had a successful career as a transportation planner and project manager working with Opus Hamilton Ltd. following graduate school in 2004 and moving on to work with TransLink in 2007. Kamala’s work included pedestrian, cycling and transit plans for municipalities across British Columbia as well as major projects with TransLink - executing an operational readiness program for the Millennium Line Broadway Extension and working on the redesign of the Broadway SkyTrain Station (currently under construction).

 

She was smart, sassy, fiercely loyal and adventurous. She cared deeply about the state of the world, and everyone in it. Even in her last days she was arranging meals for her friend, a new mom, who lives clear across the continent.

 

After losing her battle with cancer, Kamala leaves behind her wonderful husband Bryn Davidson - her partner of over 18 years and her sweet, four-year old son Bei (Bubba) and many family members and friends across North America. We will dearly remember a profound woman who made everyone’s lives a little bit brighter and whose ‘sparkle’ will live on with us forever.

 

A Celebration of Life will be held for Kamala on July 21 in Squamish. An invite for the memorial can be requested from Karen: karen@cspaceak.com. You can also make a donation to the family here.

Becky Tarbotton Memorial Scholarship

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Becky Tarbotton was an exceptional SCARP student, a highly successful alumna, a wonderful human being and a passionate champion of environmental and social justice. She passed away three years ago at the age of 39. 

Becky's family and close friends, in conjunction with SCARP, are setting up a scholarship in her name. The goal is to raise $90,000 so that we can award $3,000 annually to a student who shares Becky's vision for the planet and who strives for transformative change. We are already almost half way towards that goal and we hope to offer the first scholarship in the fall of 2016.

If you are interested in learning more about Becky, or contributing to the scholarship fund, please take a moment to go to http://beckytarbottonscholarship.org/

SCARP PhD grad receives top planning award

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Magdalena Ugarte, a PhD graduate of UBC’s School of Community and Regional Planning, has been awarded the 2019 Barclay Gibbs Jones Award for Best Dissertation in Planning by the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. The award recognizes “superior scholarship in a doctoral dissertation completed by a student enrolled in an ACSP-member school.”

Ugarte’s work examines the role that law, policy and planning practices have played in the dispossession and marginalization of Indigenous peoples in Chile, her home country, from colonial times until today. She explores how a recent government policy aimed at regulating Indigenous consultation restricts the rights and sovereignty of Indigenous peoples by imposing Western legal structures upon them.  

Based on extensive historical archival research and fieldwork, including interviews with dozens of Indigenous leaders and government officials familiar with Indigenous policy, Ugarte’s study was described as a “tour de force” by award committee chair Rachel Weber, a professor and director of graduate studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago’s College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs.

The committee praised Ugarte’s study for its design, its elegant integration of original findings with critical theory and its “guidance to planners for how to engage across clashing normative systems."

“The most inspiring aspect of the project was not the dissertation research itself, but some of the unanticipated relationships that grew during my fieldwork,” Ugarte told the ACSP. “I’ve been privileged to meet committed folks and organizations working for Indigenous justice and resurgence in my country, who have involved me in some of the work they do. I owe much of the insights developed in my dissertation to the reflections emerging from those encounters.”

Now an assistant professor in the School of Urban and Regional Planning at Ryerson University, Ugarte is working with Mapuche partners in Chile on a community-based research project aimed at addressing challenges relating to Indigenous land use planning and Indigenous law. The project is being funded by an Insight Development Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.

Ugarte received her award today at the ACSP’s 59th Annual Conference in Greenville, South Carolina.

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