Yangon Stories: Framing Living Heritage as Tool to Prevent Spatial violence
24 August 2022
Yangon Stories aims to frame the potentials of a living heritage approach to informal settlements to challenge existing dynamics of spatial violence in Yangon in order to mobilize more inclusive urban planning practices. This project brings a unique perspective to the intersections of heritage, violence and dignity by linking spatial violence trajectories with situated storytelling about heritage-making. We view forms of contestation and agency of informal dwellers facing evictions and resettlement as counter practices of living heritage.
In this project we aim to:
- Foster multi-disciplinary and collaborative research designed to transform understanding of the causes, impacts and legacies of spatial violence;
- Develop relevant collections of archival, oral, ethnographic and other sources, from policymakers, women’s groups, communities, and local leaders;
- Develop theoretical frameworks and methodological innovations to contribute substantive insights into heritage-making practices as forms of countering violence, informing broader understandings of community-led conflict prevention strategies.
- Team
Yangon Stories is a collaborative project betweenÌýDevelopment Planning Unit:ÌýDr. Catalina OrtizÌý- PI;ÌýDr. Giovanna Astolfo;ÌýProf. Camillo Boano; Dr. Elizabeth Rhoads; and local researchers and partner organisations.
Funding: The project is funded by British Academy through its
- Main activities
Report launchÌý– March 9 2021
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ÌýKickstart Workshop – February 3-7, 2020
ÌýDPU Fellowships 2020
Chauncie Bigler. Framing the Living Heritage Approach for the Periphery: ÌýConstructing Place, Space, and Community in Yangon, ÌýMyanmar
Naiara Yumiko Murakami Dutra da Costa. Building epistemic designs: decolonial cartography as a tool to subvert forced evictions infrastructure
ÌýDPU Fellowships 2021
Roisin McNamara, ÌýSpatial violence through modes of dispossession: A study of vulnerability and climate change adaptation in YangonÌý
DPU Fellowships 2022Maki Saso, Contributions of squatter settlements amid expanding enclave urbanism in Hlaing Thayar, Yangon
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Sawa Shiroma, Urban Transformation and Spatial Violence through Capital Accumulation in Yangon
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Higa Akemi, Living Heritage as a narrative shift for liberation: Civic disobedience practices to oppose spatial violence in YangonÌý
ÌýWebinar -ÌýÌý-ÌýJun 10, 2022
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- Outputs
Yangon Stories Website -ÌýÌý
(Yangon Stories, 2022).Ìý
Kolovou Kouri, M.Ìý(2022).Ìý. DPU Blog
Roberts, J.L. & E. Rhoads. (2021). .ÌýCritical Asian Studies
Kolovou Kouri, M. & Sakuma, S. (2021). Community-led housing in Yangon: An assessment of the Mae Myit Thar project.Ìý
Kolovou Kouri, M., Sakuma, S., Oritz, C., Astolfo, G & Rhoads, E. (2021). Trajectories of spatial violence in Southeast Asian cities. DPU Working Paper Series (207), London. ISSN: 1474-3280
Rhoads, E., Sakuma, S., Ortiz, C. (2021).ÌýViolations of the Right to Adequate Housing after the Coup.ÌýPolicy Paper.ÌýRhoads, E. (2020). Geopolitics.
Astolfo, G. & Boano, C. (2020). Planning Theory & Practice.Ìý
Rhoads, E. (2020). ‘'. in Kyed, H.M. (ed.), ÌýEveryday Justice in Myanmar: Informal Resolutions and State Evasion in a Time of Contested Transition. NIAS Studies in Asian Topics; No. 71. NIAS Press. pp.283-313.
Ortiz, C., & Lipietz, B. (eds.). (2020).Ìý London: University College London.Ìý
ResourcesOn Yangon urbanism, informal settlements, heritage, housing, spatial violence and history
Anonymous.Ìý(2021). An Initial Report on Forced Evictions of Squatters in Hlaing Tharyar during the Coup.Ìý
Asian Development Bank, ADB. (2019).
Boutry, M. (2017). . in: C. Middleton, R. Elmhirst & S. Chantavanich (eds.), Living with floods in a mobile Southeast Asia. AÌýpolitical ecology of vulnerability, migration and environmental change. pp. 42–62. New York: Routledge.
Campbell, S. (2019), .ÌýAnthropology TodayÌý35, (6), pp. 7–10.
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