Mourning New York City’s Smart City Tech (neoliberal fallacy); Celebrating its Potential (tool for c…
New York City is launching a flurry of “smart city” initiatives, ballyhooed by the Adams administration as the nation's shining key ...

Rhetoric of Resilience and Radiation in Post-Fukushima Japan
The Japanese people and landscapes still feel the unending impacts of a nuclear catastrophe that occurred a dozen years ago. Thousands of...
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Mourning New York City’s Smart City Tech (neoliberal fallacy); Celebrating its Potential (tool for c…
New York City is launching a flurry of “smart city” initiatives, ballyhooed by the Adams administration as the nation's shining key ...

Rhetoric of Resilience and Radiation in Post-Fukushima Japan
The Japanese people and landscapes still feel the unending impacts of a nuclear catastrophe that occurred a dozen years ago. Thousands of...
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“In 2002, a diverse group of over 80 individuals … came together to form the ‘Tokyo Picnic Club’ with the goal of reclaiming city space for people instead of cars… they left a resounding message for communities everywhere to gather spontaneously in city spaces that rightfully belong to us. Streets are much more than spaces for cars— streets are civic commons. Where there is absence, we can bring presence; where curbs are dull and void of meaningful interaction, we can bring our livliness and intentionality.” Sharing my piece“Right to Picnic,” originally published in print for Harapeko Magazine last year. https://paragraph.xyz/@miawintam.eth/right-to-picnic