Space is a technology. Buildings and the cities they inhabit have become infrastructural - mobile, monetized networks. For the world's power players, infrastructure space is a secret weapon, and the rest of us are only just beginning to realize. If Victor Hugo came back to give a TED talk, he might assert that architecture, which he once claimed had been killed by the book, is reincarnate as something more powerful still - as information itself. If this space is a secret weapon, says Keller Easterling, it is a secret best kept from those trained to make space - architects. Meanwhile, entrepreneurs in economics, the social sciences, informatics and activism are developing what might be called spatial software as a political instrument to outwit politics as usual.
Progressive Capitalism : How to Make Tech Work for All of Us
Ro Khanna
audiobookbookBlood, Powder, and Residue
Beth A. Bechky
audiobookSuperpower : One Man's Quest to Transform American Energy
Russell Gold
bookUnited Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
United Nations
bookFourteenth report on human rights of the United Nations Verification Mission in Guatemala
United Nations Verification Mission Verification in Guatemala
bookJustice, Justice Thou Shalt Pursue : My Life's Work Fighting for a More Perfect Union
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Amanda L. Tyler
bookHandover of Power - Digital
Andreas Seidl
bookLymphedema Diet
Brandon Gilta
bookA Mission from God: A Memoir and Challenge for America
James Meredith
bookGender, Materiality, and Politics : Essays on the making of power
Martin Almbjär, Anna Nilsson Hammar, Daniel Nyström
bookThe Realisation of the Supreme Self
Trevor leggett
bookOn the Shoulders of Giants : My Journey Through the Harlem Renaissance
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
book