Table of Contents
May 01, 2024; Volume 43,Issue 1
Fargher-navarro, Lane F.
- You have accessRestricted accessUrban Landscape Transformation During the Covid‐19 PandemicThe Case of Parks in Merida, YucatanVicente F. Zárate‐Flores and Lane F. Fargher‐NavarroLandscape Journal, May 2024, 43 (1) 27-48; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.43.1.27Vicente F. Zárate‐FloresVicente F. Zárate‐Flores is a PhD student in the Departamento de Ecología Humana, Cinvestav del IPN—Unidad Mérida, Yucatan, Mexico. He received a bachelor of architecture degree from Universidad LaSalle in Mexico City and a master’s degree in architecture with an urban design concentration from the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona. He has over 15 years of experience working as a professional in the architecture field and has taught courses related to urban design theories and principles as well as sustainable architecture and urban design at various universities. His current research focuses on the development and application of transdisciplinary tools for urban‐landscape research and problem‐solving.Lane F. Fargher‐NavarroLane F. Fargher‐Navarro received a PhD in anthropology from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 2004 and completed a postdoc at Purdue University (2004–2005). Since 2010 he has been a researcher in the Department of Human Ecology at Cinvestav del IPN, in Merida, Mexico, where he is currently investigador titular c. Fargher‐Navarro’s research includes archaeology, historical ecology, ethnographic studies, and biogeochemistry. This research has been funded by NSF, NGS, FAMSI, and Mexico’s CONAHCYT, among others. He has authored or coauthored over 40 peer‐reviewed journal articles and book chapters, as well as two books, including Collective Action in the Formation of Premodern States.
Foster, Jeremy
- You have accessRestricted accessArchitecture and the Nazi Cultural Landscape: Blood, Soil, BuildingJeremy FosterLandscape Journal, May 2024, 43 (1) 129-133; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.43.1.129Jeremy FosterTrained as an architect and landscape architect, Jeremy Foster, a PhD in cultural and historical geography, is interested in the opportunities landscape thinking offers for environmental understanding, interpretation, and design practice. At Cornell from 2003 to 2021, he taught design, theory, and history to students in architecture, landscape architecture, planning, and the humanities and social sciences, working in contexts across the globe. Foster’s transdisciplinary research into how built/grown landscapes are produced and reproduced through the entanglement of cultural discourses, representational regimes, environmental processes, and socio‐material practices has appeared in multiple journals and edited volumes.