It’s an interesting report. They don’t seem to actually ask questions about children’s transport, only adult commuting distance.
It’s an interesting report. They don’t seem to actually ask questions about children’s transport, only adult commuting distance.
So if it’s not covered in other committees, surely, as I think @rantyhighwayman.bsky.social is suggesting, it could be considered by this committee?
Is eg children’s play and leisure covered by transport committee?
Cover of 1994 book on architecture & social reform by Deborah Wiener. Cover depicts a London School Board building.
it’s #WHM, so I thought I’d post about books that explore women in/& architecture/built env’t & the women who write them. Women architectural historians go rather not seen. So today, an excellent book from 1994 & a link to a short piece I wrote about it. womenwritingarchitecture.org/annotation/e...
This makes me wonder about taking a longer view on this type of funding, esp how play is woven into wider policies and funding programmes. I am writing about this pre-2000 (urban aid etc) but hadn’t thought about it beyond this.
A couple of questions:
1) Can anyone recommend any (critical, early) reviews of Pride in Place that I might not have found?
2) Is anyone familiar with examples of Pride in Place boards talking about or engaging with space for play? I have found a few but guess there are more.
Thank you!
@path-dependent.bsky.social ?
Tales of the Suburbs is Book of the Day in the Guardian! ‘This fantastically entertaining alternative history of queer life in Britain’ www.theguardian.com/books/2026/m...
I blogged about “Just Objects?”, the event I ran with @drhick.bsky.social
about inclusion and belonging in public space, at the Farrell Centre in Newcastle. Photo courtesy of panellist @draflint.bsky.social
www.catherinemax.co.uk/just-objects/
Happy publication day to @uobrishistory.bsky.social’s Professor Sumita Mukherjee!
Nothing recent other than the DfT trip chaining report and that only scratches at the surface.
I’m not sure that stands up to close scrutiny. If you live and work in a city it can be much quicker and more reliable to cycle than to drive. Ebikes also help with this. I for one couldn’t have juggled work, shopping, visiting parents, school run and after school activities as easily by car.
Meanwhile Manchester starting to enforce theirs www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater...
The research funding landscape has changed hugely in the last decade, and it merits reflection. The AHRC Landscape & Environment programme basically kickstarted a generation of Env hums scholarship in UK.
Three illustrations featuring bicycles from the Metropolitan Museum of Arts' archives. Styles include Art Nouveau, a pencil sketch of death on a bicycle, and a 19th Century advert for a book about students cycling across Asia.
👀 The Met has put 490,000 high res images online - including many of bikes - and made them free for everyone to use: www.openculture.com/2024/11/the-... @openculture.bsky.social
Pleased to this moving forward and Shred the North’s expertise being drawn in to find a new space.
"It wasn't simply a skatepark; it was a unique, weather-protected space that supported a thriving, multi-disciplined community all year round”
Very true. Even got the youngest on her bike today!
I second this - it was a total pleasure and an amazing feat given we are all juggling so many other things. Not least some new babies and young children (not mine!)
💥New | What oral histories can teach us about effective environmental research
✍️ Paul Merchant & @angecass.bsky.social
#OralHistory #ResearchImpact #CoProduction
Black and white photo of children playing on swings in concrete playing area with stepped terrace of white-rendered flats to rear, 1979.
🚨 New on Substack: my final post on Camden's Highgate New Town looks at the new trends that marked its later development - Defensible Space, Right to Buy, and the new demand for sustainable development. (Photo credit: Martin Charles / RIBA Collections
municipaldreams.substack.com/p/highgate-n...
I am so honoured to be on @oldweirdalbion.bsky.social 's beguiling podcast series Uncanny Landscapes
uncannylandscapes.podbean.com
as part of an (unintentional?) trio of north-western English women discussing trespass, commoning and protest
This is fine as a snapshot of how things are in the place, but...what do we do?
Whatever it is will almost certainly need spending not tax cuts.
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Out today @intellectbooks.bsky.social: 'Reconstructing the American Dream: Life Inside the Tiny House Nation' w/Ella Harris, Mel Nowicki & Cian Oba-Smith. Through photographic and ethnographic accounts of life in Texas tiny home communities, we examine the politics of 'going tiny' in the US today.
And how universities are looking at what they can sell to pay the bills
Indicative of a) how communities can come to rely on universities as provisioning community services b) how a prestige project can become a liability c) how positive heritage narratives don’t pay the bills d) abt what constitutes legit use of student fee income
www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2026...
On the pioneering post-war survey of teenagers and young adults in Birmingham, funded by the Edward Cadbury Charitable Trust in 1950 archive.org/details/b327... Hope the new wave of strategic plans for England will commission similar. @oneplacestudies.bsky.social @historyandpolicy.bsky.social
Last night there was a vigil for the first cycling fatality of the year on London's streets. I was there. Here are some thoughts (no paywall).
If this strikes a chord with you, please comment on the post and share.
open.substack.com/pub/nedboult...
This two-day workshop will explore several questions. How can environmental history complement or offer alternatives to existing historiographical narratives and periodisations in British history? What new actors, events, or phenomena might come to the fore? How should it foster engagements with places beyond its national borders or with other disciplines? Is environmental history different from longstanding traditions of ‘landscape’ or ‘urban’ histories of Britain? What contributions can historians make to environmental advocacy and policymaking? And how might a focus on the environment reshape teaching in British history? To take part, participants should submit a 300 word proposal for a short ‘position paper’ (approx. 2500 words) that will be pre-circulated at the workshop. These position papers will address the place of environmental approaches and themes within modern British history (1800 to the present) from the perspective of the participant’s own research. Participants will orally summarise their papers at the workshop. The event is free to attend and includes lunch and refreshments. Submissions are welcomed across a range of perspectives and topics, including but not limited to: energy, extraction, non-human actors, pollution, toxicity, rural and urban landscapes, everyday environmental histories (including how they are shaped by class, gender, and race), imperialism and decolonisation, ‘green’ policy, activism, and the political economy of the natural world. Please send proposals and a one-paragraph biography in a single PDF to andrew.seaton@manchester.ac.uk by 15 May 2026. Please also direct enquiries to this address. This event is organised by Dr. Max Long (Oxford) and Dr. Andrew Seaton (Manchester).
CALL FOR PAPERS - Modern British History and the 'Environmental Turn'.
A two-day workshop organised by @maxlong.bsky.social and myself at Lincoln College, Oxford, 16-17 September. Deadline for abstracts is 15 May.
Details in poster below, please share.
Interested in the relationship between social movements and the politics of mobility?
Movements & Mobility is looking for short essay, video, and multimedia guest posts from activists, artists, and academics, and students. Get in touch!
Thank you to everyone who shared their research with us yesterday! We enjoyed a brilliant first day of papers and a fantastic keynote from @sarahcrook.bsky.social. Looking forward to starting Day 2 shortly - look at this wonderful line up: 😊 voicesofmotherhood.wp.worc.ac.uk/index.php/20...