LA 4930

LA 4930

Course information provided by the 2025-2026 Catalog.

The course centers the historical intersection of industrialization, environmentalism, and urbanism in the so-called Second World. It explores the 20th-century history of urban ecological design, focused on ‘landscape infrastructures’ e.g. urban parks, ecosystem services, industrial and communal hygiene, and systems of society-nature relations. Students will apply critical and comparative analysis to the question of when, where and how urbanists’ systems for urban environments and infrastructures proved (un)sustainable. What was the socialist dream of green cities? How did it vary across state-socialist contexts? What has happened to those dreams over time? More specifically, how did urbanists and affiliated specialists approach the design, construction and maintenances of built environments relative to state socialist political, economic and cultural conditions?


Distribution Requirements (HA-AG)

Exploratory Studies (CU-SBY)

Last 4 terms offered (None)

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Combined with: LA 6930

  • 3 Credits Opt NoAud

  • 19291 LA 4930   SEM 101

    • R
    • Aug 25 - Dec 8, 2025
    • Taylor, M

  • Instruction Mode: In Person