Beth Sanders and Jason Syvixay investigate how their locational, gender, sexual orientation, age and racial identities shape their experience of cities, their work as city planners and some implications for the planning profession. (Note: you don’t have to be a city planner to enjoy this conversation!)
Read MoreIn my quest to figure out how planners and everyone else in the city can work better together, I’ve learned the magic of finding the minimal critical structure that enables new possibilities.
Read MoreBeth Sanders and Soni Dasmohapatra explore heritage, health, hibernation and the creation of community that learns together.
Read MoreImproving our cities requires us to be in a better relationship with ourselves: our intentions, actions, and the consequences of our actions.
Read MoreBeth Sanders and guest Hilary Van Welter explore Alice in Wonderland's Mad Hatter's Tea Party, only to understand that disruption and clarity co-exist.
Read MoreThe implementation of Edmonton’s city plan requires a culture change—inside and outside city hall. And it all hinges on how we handle accountability and shame.
Read MoreOur evolutionary journey—our resilience and adaptability—depends on our ability generate new kinds of work, new ways of thinking, making and doing new things.
Read MoreI am part of the culture that propagates this old story: we settler people are better than Indigenous people.
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