DISPLACEMENT + URBANISM
Interconnections between Displacement and Urbanism
Over the past few decades, conflict-induced displacement has become both increasingly urban and protracted. This has led to a wide range of impacts on the built environment, sometimes in unexpected ways, such as coming up against cultural heritage designations.
Our work on displacement and urbanism can be found at:
[Forthcoming book chapter:] Harris-Brandts, S., & Sichinava, D. (2020). The Politics of Urban Recovery in a Stalinist-era Resort Town: Heritage Tourism and Displaced Communities in Tskaltubo, Georgia. In Al-Harithy, H. (Ed.), Urban Recovery at the Intersection of Displacement and Reconstruction. Routledge.
Gogishvili, D., & Harris-Brandts, S. (2019). The social and spatial insularity of internally displaced persons:“neighbourhood effects” in Georgia’s collective centres. Caucasus Survey, 7(2), 134-156.
Pasquinelli, C., Koukoufikis, G., & Gogishvili, D. (2019). Beyond eventification: capacity building in post-disaster temporariness. Journal of Place Management and Development.
Salukvadze, J.,Sichinava, D., & Gogishvili, D. (2015). Socio-economic and Spatial Factors of Alienation and Segregation of Internally Displaced Persons in the Cities of Georgia. Spatial Inequality and Cohesion: Studia Regionalia, 38, 45–60.
Harris-Brandts, S. (2015) The Humanitarian Architect: Notes on Ethical Engagement. Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) Annual Meeting: The Expanding Periphery. Toronto, Canada.
Gogishvili, D. (2015). Urban dimensions of internal displacement in Georgia: The Phenomenon and the Emerging Housing Policy. Available at SSRN 2591291.
Salukvadze, J., Gachechiladze, R., Gogishvili, D., Sichinava, D., Javashvili, A., Tugushi, K., & Bregvadze, M. (2013). Coping with marginality and exclusion: can refugees communities successfully integrate into mainstream urban societies in Georgia. Tbilisi, Tbilisi State University, Faculty of Social & Political Studies.