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7+ opere 254 membri 4 recensioni

Opere di Jay Walljasper

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Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1955
Data di morte
2020-12-22
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di residenza
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Attività lavorative
speaker
writer
Organizzazioni
Onthecommons.org
Utne Reader
Breve biografia
Jay Walljasper chronicles stories from around the world that point us toward a greener, more equitable and more enjoyable future. His focus goes beyond what’s in the headlines to chronicle the surprising real life of communities today.

Jay is editor of OnTheCommons.org and a Senior Fellow Fellow and editor at On the Commons.org, an organization devoted to restoring an appreciation of common purpose and common assets to contemporary life. He is also a Senior Fellow at Project for Public Spaces, a New York-based organization that helps citizens enliven their communities by improving public places. He is also a Contributing Editor of National Geographic Traveler, reporting regularly on sustainable tourism initiatives, and as an associate of the Citistates Group, a public affair consortium focusing on metropolitan regions.

Walljasper is the author of The Great Neighborhood Book (2007) and Visionaries: People and Ideas to Change Your Life (2001). His new book, What We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons appears in July 2010.His experience includes being editorial director and editor of Utne Reader, executive editor of Ode magazine, and a travel editor at Better Homes & Gardens.

Utenti

Recensioni

This collection of essays details the Commons – the things that we share such as water, air, the internet, and other public spaces and ideas. Many of these things are in danger of being privatized and/or squandered and destroyed. The essays suggest the commons as a third way between corporatism and government control. I found the book intriguing as it introduced me to many new concepts build on old ideas. The format of essays was complicating though as each author seemed to begin by reiterating the same basic ideas at the start of each essay making the book overly repetitive. A good read though for anyone looking for new ways to tackle to problems of modern politics.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Othemts | Sep 2, 2012 |
(Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this review, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted here illegally.)

Gentrification. There. I said it. It's an instantly controversial term, one that means profoundly different things to different people; for some it's ultimately positive, a process of cleaning up slummy inner-city neighborhoods and making them thriving family communities again, while for others it's ultimately negative, conjuring up images of smug middle-class white people taking over a neighborhood like a plague, kicking out the "nasty coloreds, homeless and other undesirables" to make way for their precious little bicycles and their precious little Starbucks and their precious little two-million-dollar condos on every g-dda-n corner. And let's just face facts; Jay Walljasper's The Great Neighborhood Book, a product of the non-profit Project for Public Spaces, is pretty much a detailed blueprint on how to successfully gentrify an urban area, and what you think of the book depends directly on what you think of gentrification in the first place. For those who are down with the cause, for example, this will be an imminently practical and inspirational little guide to urban revitalization (or "placemaking," as Walljasper delicately puts it); it is packed with small, concrete, physical plans for hundreds of neighborhood projects, everything from creating community spaces to increasing neighborhood safety, from getting local traffic to slow down to getting local businesses to move in. If, however, the very concept of gentrification makes you grind your teeth, you need to stay away from this book like it was poison; because to you that's what it actually is, a sanctimonious little manifesto about how freaking great it is to be a Caucasian with money and a white-collar job, and how of course that gives such people the right to tell everyone else how to live too. (After all, isn't that how it works in America? That the people with the most money are the ones most entitled to tell everyone else how to live their own lives?) I'm giving the book a fairly high score today, specifically in consideration for the people out there who will like it; I'm warning you right now, though, that you might not be one of those people, depending on how you look at the issue of middle-class-led city cleanup to begin with.

Out of 10: 8.4
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
jasonpettus | 1 altra recensione | Jul 28, 2008 |
Easy to read and full of simple actions you can take to improve your neighborhood. Lots of examples of real people implementing the ideas and making a difference. Maybe I'll try some of them out!
 
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justjill | 1 altra recensione | Jan 16, 2008 |
spirit, community, social action, seeing green, creativity, body
 
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aletheia21 | Jun 3, 2007 |

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Statistiche

Opere
7
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
254
Popolarità
#90,187
Voto
4.0
Recensioni
4
ISBN
6
Lingue
1

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