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Table of Contents

May 01, 2023; Volume 42,Issue 1

Editor’s Letter

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    Editor’s Letter
    James LaGro Jr.
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) iv; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.iv
    James LaGro Jr.
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Guest Editors’ Introduction to the Special Issue

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    Guest Editors’ Introduction to the Special Issue
    Robert Corry and Charlene LeBleu
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) v-vi; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.v
    Robert Corry
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    Charlene LeBleu
    Roles: Guest Editors
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Peer-Reviewed Articles

  • Open Access
    Transdisciplinarity and Boundary Work for Landscape Architecture Scholars
    Joan Iverson Nassauer
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 1-11; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.1
    Joan Iverson Nassauer
    Joan Iverson Nassauer, FCELA, FASLA, is a professor in the School for Environment & Sustainability at the University of Michigan and past editor-in-chief of Landscape and Urban Planning. She uses design-in-science as part of transdisciplinary approaches to build knowledge about how ecological design and planning affect human well-being, aesthetic experience, and the cultural sustainability of environmental benefits. Her work addresses design and planning of metropolitan and agricultural landscapes across scales—ranging from continental scale implications of agricultural practices to neighborhood scale implications of green infrastructure.
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    Artificial Intelligence in Landscape ArchitectureA Literature Review
    Phillip Fernberg and Brent Chamberlain
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 13-35; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.13
    Phillip Fernberg
    Phillip Fernberg is a landscape designer, PhD candidate, and researcher in Utah State University’s Visualization, Instrumentation and Virtual Interaction Design (VIVID) Laboratory. He has earned an MLA from Louisiana State University and a BA in Latin American Studies from Brigham Young University. Fernberg’s current research focuses on spatial cognition in complex virtual environments and the implications of artificial intelligence for landscape architecture practice. He has published articles in several international journals and magazines and is a current recipient of the LAF Fellowship for Innovation and Leadership.
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    Brent Chamberlain
    Brent Chamberlain, PhD, is an associate professor of landscape architecture and environmental planning at Utah State University. His expertise as a computational environmental planner is built on three foci: 1) visualization and spatial data science, 2) applied computational approaches (including optimization and artificial intelligence), and 3) environmental perception and affect related to built and natural environments. His work has been published in several international journals, and his research has been funded by several national and state agencies, including the NSF, DoD, NIDILRR, UT DOT, and UT Public Lands. More can be found at:
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  • Open Access
    Using Senses of Place to Help Communities Navigate Place Disruption and Uncertainty
    Lynne C. Manzo, Daniel R. Williams, Andrés Di Masso, Christopher M. Raymond and Natalie Gulsrud
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 37-52; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.37
    Lynne C. Manzo
    Lynne C. Manzo is a professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the University of Washington in Seattle (USA). She received her PhD in Environmental Psychology and specializes in people-place relationships, particularly place attachments, place meaning, and socio-spatial justice. She is the coeditor of Place Attachment: Advances in Theory, Methods and Applications (Routledge, 2021, 2nd edition with Patrick Devine-Wright), and coeditor of Changing Senses of Place: Navigating Global Challenges (2021, Cambridge University Press). She has published in such journals as the Journal of Environmental Psychology, Urban Studies, and Journal of Planning Literature, among others.
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    Daniel R. Williams
    Dr. Daniel R. Williams is a research social scientist with the U.S. Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station in Fort Collins, Colorado, USA. His current research draws on place-based inquiry and practice to inform the adaptive governance of complex social-ecological systems and the adaptive capacities of communities and institutions that make them more resilient in the face of such change. He has published extensively on place-based conservation and adaptive governance of landscape change in the context of wildfire and climate adaptation.
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    Andrés Di Masso
    Andrés Di Masso, PhD, is a professor at the University of Barcelona (Spain), where he teaches applied social psychology, political psychology, qualitative methods and epistemology. He is the coordinator of the Interaction and Social Change Research Group (GRICS-UB). His research and publications focus on the micropolitics of place and the ideological construction of people-place relations, across socially sensitive topics such as public space and the right to the city, urban transformations, racism, migration, gender, nationalism and mobilities.
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    Christopher M. Raymond
    Christopher Raymond is a Professor of Sustainability Science at the Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science, University of Helsinki, Finland. His research interests include the conceptualization and assessment of senses of place and the multiple values of nature; weaving scientific, local, and Indigenous knowledge for sustainability; nature-based solutions co-benefit assessment; and the governance of sustainability transformations. He is lead editor of the recent book Changing Senses of Place: Navigating Global Challenges and coordinating lead author of a recent Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (UN) report on the multiple values of nature.
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    Natalie Gulsrud
    Natalie Gulsrud is an associate professor at the University of Copenhagen, Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Section for Landscape Architecture and Planning. She received her PhD on the governance of urban green space branding. She studies the governance of urban green infrastructure to advance sustainable and just pathways to climate resilience. She has published in Landscape and Urban Planning, Environmental Research, and Urban Forestry and Urban Greening and is the coauthor of the book Street Fights in Copenhagen: Bicycle and Car Politics in a Green Mobility City (Routledge, 2019).
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    Illuminating a Hidden SiteThe Recovery of a Sacred Black Landscape
    Mary G. Padua
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 53-75; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.53
    Mary G. Padua
    Mary G. Padua is a licensed landscape architect with experience in the public and private sectors, including managing her practice, MGP Studio art design research. Her practice and research activities focus on human-centered outdoor restorative environments and the cultivation of place. Simultaneously a design educator and professor at Clemson University, where she served four years as chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture, Padua is an internationally recognized changemaker. She is an award-winning writer and visual artist with original photographs held in public and private collections. Her publications span China’s hyperurbanization, novel American landscapes, and interrogating the meaning of place.
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    Guerrillas in Our MidstAd Hoc Urbanism and Public Practice
    Susannah Abbey
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 77-90; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.77
    Susannah Abbey
    Susannah Abbey is a writer and landscape designer who teaches in the School of Architecture and Planning at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.
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    Teaching Design as an Infinite GameAdaptive Systems and Resilient Landscapes
    Noah Billig and Tori Kjer
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 91-107; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.91
    Noah Billig
    Noah Billig, PhD, is an associate professor of Landscape Architecture and Planning in the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design at the University of Arkansas. He has taught, researched, and worked in the landscape architecture and planning fields in the United States, Turkey, and Austria. His research focuses on adaptive design and planning, including community engagement; environmental justice; generative design; and perceptions of environments.
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    Tori Kjer
    Tori Kjer, executive director at the Los Angeles Neighborhood Land Trust, holds a master’s degree and licensure in landscape architecture, with over a decade’s experience implementing projects and advocating for policies focused on improving community health outcomes through fresh food access, stormwater capture, and green space development. Previously as LA program director of the Trust for Public Land, Kjer established TPL’s Los Angeles Parks for People Program, collaborating with partners and community stakeholders to identify priorities, build trust, and lead coalitions, helping raise over $50 million in public and private grants and overseeing the development of a dozen new parks.
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    Decolonizing the Language of Landscape Architecture
    N. Claire Napawan, Linda Chamorro, Debra Guenther and Yiwei Huang
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 109-129; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.109
    N. Claire Napawan
    N. Claire Napawan is an associate professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of California, Davis.
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    Linda Chamorro
    Linda Chamorro is an assistant professor of Landscape Architecture at Florida International University.
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    Debra Guenther
    Debra Guenther, FASLA, is a design partner at Mithun in Seattle, Washington.
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    Yiwei Huang
    Yiwei Huang is an assistant professor of Landscape Architecture at Purdue University.
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Perspectives from Practice

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    Landscape Architecture Chairs’ Retrospect and Prospect of Academic Leadership Disrupted by COVID-19
    Ming-Han Li, Sadik Artunç, Terry Clements and Diane Jones Allen
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 131-137; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.131
    Ming-Han Li
    Ming-Han Li, AICP, PE, PLA, FCELA, FASLA, is a professor and director of the School of Planning, Design and Construction at Michigan State University. Li’s unique strength is his interdisciplinary background. He is a certified planner, professional engineer, and professional landscape architect. Li’s research experience and background cover stormwater management, low impact development, soil bioengineering, soil erosion, and roadside vegetation management. His teaching has focused on sustainable water management, low impact development, and landscape architecture construction.
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    Sadik Artunç
    Sadık Artunç, FASLA, is a professor and head of the Department of Landscape Architecture at Mississippi State University. He is a professional landscape architect and forester/forest engineer. His recent research experience covers pedagogy, design implementation and design, and interdisciplinarity. His teaching has focused on developing students’ knowledge, skills, and abilities equally in design and design implementation to prepare them for successful professional development and practice.
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    Terry Clements
    Terry Clements, PLA, FCELA, FASLA, is a professor in and chair of the Landscape Architecture Program in the School of Design at Virginia Tech. Her recent research experience explores site design and place-making, design education and pedagogy, and cultural landscape studies. Prof. Clements’s teaching focuses on community-engaged design practices, site design and construction, and student-directed learning through education abroad.
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    Diane Jones Allen
    Diane Jones Allen, D. Eng., PLA, FASLA, is program director and professor of Landscape Architecture, University of Texas, Arlington. She is principal landscape architect with DesignJones LLC, which received the 2016 American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) Community Service Award. Jones Allen is part of one of two cross-disciplinary teams that won the 2020 SOM Foundation Research Prize focused on examining social justice in urban contexts. She also received an appointment as fellow for Garden and Landscape Studies at Dumbarton Oaks for the 2021–2022 academic year.
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Book Reviews

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    Cultivating Creativity
    Brooke K. Sullivan
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 139-140; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.139
    Brooke K. Sullivan
    Brooke K. Sullivan has over 20 years of experience in environmental consulting and restoration design and has worked for 5 years in higher education as a teacher and researcher. They received a PhD in Science of Coastal and Estuarine Ecology from the University of Melbourne in Victoria Australia and a Master of Science in Restoration Ecology and Environmental Horticulture from the School of Environmental and Forest Sciences at the University of Washington. Prior to completing their graduate work, they studied for a certificate in Restoration Ecology and earned a Bachelor of Landscape Architecture from the Department of Landscape Architecture and a Bachelor of Arts in Community and Environmental Planning at the University of Washington.
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    Against the AnthropoceneVisual Culture and the Environment Today
    Theodore S. Eisenman
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 140-142; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.140
    Theodore S. Eisenman
    Theodore S. Eisenman, Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning, University of Massachusetts Amherst.
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    Cyclical CityFive Stories of Urban Transformation
    Richard C. Smardon
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 142-144; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.142
    Richard C. Smardon
    Richard C. Smardon is a SUNY distinguished service professor emeritus at SUNY-College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
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    How Spaces Become PlacesPlace Makers Tell Their Stories
    Richard C. Smardon
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 144-145; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.144
    Richard C. Smardon
    Richard C. Smardon is a SUNY distinguished service professor emeritus at SUNY-College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
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    Plants in DesignA Guide to Designing With Southern Landscape Plants
    Nicholas Serrano
    Landscape Journal, May 2023, 42 (1) 145-147; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.42.1.145
    Nicholas Serrano
    Nicholas Serrano, PhD, Louisiana State University.
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Landscape Journal: 42 (1)
Landscape Journal
Vol. 42, Issue 1
1 May 2023
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The Olmsteds and the Land-Grant Universities
The Vanishing Landscape of the Southern West Virginia Coalfields
Protecting the Identity of Sheep-Farming Landscapes in the Outer Carpathians
Myth, Memory, and Placemaking
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