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Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Social urbanism and Israel

I am half Jewish, and likely had I been in Germany during Hitler's time, I'd have been killed off, so I have always had (and was brought up to be) sympathetic and empathetic to the idea and reality of Israel as a Jewish state.  [My father's parents moved to the US around 1910.]

OTOH, as heinous as the Holocaust was, nothing can justify treating a population/ethnic group as bad as the Nazis.  Reading about the West Bank and Gaza Strip and the Israelis reminds me of descriptions of the Warsaw Ghetto, or the bantustans in South Africa under apartheid.

It embarrasses me as a member of the Jewish diaspora that this is justified as a way to support Jews (I guess that is the difference between a people and a state).

While I agree with Peter Beinart's position on the one state solution ("A Liberal Zionist’s Move to the Left on the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict," New Yorker), I don't understand why Israel hasn't taken a social urbanist/equity planning approach to the Arab population--to build and strengthen it--instead of a program of subjugation, disdain and violence.

The best example of social urbanism is Medellin, Colombia, where a series of access and community investments has contributed to a drop in the murder rate of 90%.

Medellin was the center of Colombia's infamous drug cartels, the hub of the world's trade in cocaine.  It was awash in money and violence, with 5,840 murders at the peak in 1991 -- 2022's number of 392 is less than 7% of the peak.

Infrastructure improvements have helped augment the quality of life in Medellin. Cable cars connect the poorest neighborhoods, perched high on steep mountains, to the rest of the city. Paul Smith/For The Washington Post).

But addressing the crime cartels, alongside a program of public investment including in libraries, parks, arts centers and other civic facilities, and especially mobility improvements--a subway, aerial gondola system, escalators for steep hills, bike sharing, etc.--to better connect people who had limited access to the city because of topography, has transformed the city ("From murder capital to model city: is Medellín's miracle show or substance?," Guardian). From the article:

Arley Palomino, 18, says he remembers when just walking to school was an act of bravery. Firefights between gangs could break out at any time. "We were isolated here. The police wouldn't even dare come," he says, lounging under a leafy tree next to the España Library with a small group of secondary school students, lulled by the steady hum of cable cars and the heat of the day.

Since the MetroCable system was built in 2004 and the library in 2007, things have changed, Palomino says. The gangs are still around but the random violence is gone, he says. There is a constant police presence and residents feel proud of their neighbourhood.

"It is in areas that are most abandoned that there is more violence," says Palomino, who plans to study semiotics at the University of Antioquia. "Today we are no longer abandoned here." He sweeps his arm toward the España Library.
Resources

Past blog entries

-- "An outline for integrated equity planning: concepts and programs," 2017
-- "Equity planning: an update," 2020

7 comments:

  1. charlie11:41 AM

    I have to admit being strangely fascinated by the urban form of gaza.

    1. Land Use in israel is heavily constrained. No idea on Gaza but it looks like no zoning.

    2. Majority of construction concrete, don't see much rebar in the wreckage.

    3. Evidence in some pictures of street landscaping, lights etc.

    4. No evidence of roof top solar.

    5. Great potential for street cars. No idea on any public transit.

    Nobody wants to make that investment, it's designed to be temporary (everyone buys into that), and it's very likely the billions put in by international donors just went to Hamas.



    "For Sale: Luxury Villas, Under Israeli Occupation"


    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2023-08-29/israel-palestine-conflict-looms-over-jericho-gate-development?sref=4NgeXq8Q

    in the west bank, but gives you some idea of the issues.


    That definitely used to be the mark of occupying/colonial powers -- infrastructure investments.

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  2. That's quite an article. Thanks. Not thst I am against public investment but in a place like Palestine there would be tons of graft. Allowing the economy to build and for people to be invested in place can help change outcomes in positive ways.

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  3. https://www.curbed.com/2023/10/architects-gaza-michael-sorkin-borders-war-memorial.html

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  4. charlie8:56 AM

    https://ig.ft.com/gaza-damage/


    "How Israeli air strikes destroyed one neighbourhood in Gaza"


    Looking at the pictures, again a lot less rebar than you'd normally see.

    The Israelis in a week have used about the same tonnage of bombs that the Germans did to London in WW2.

    Death toll is less -- 40K in London versus maybe around 5K in Gaza.

    Again not looking at the politics here, just the urban form of gaza and it's de construction.




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  5. charlie8:24 AM

    Saw a bit that touched on land use.

    Each family owns a plot, and it's a family property. You might get your own floor once you get married and have to finish it out.

    Pretty common land ownership structure pre 20th century.

    But accelerates tribalism. I know that well, in fact II am now the 1/6 owner of my grandfathers house in India, which is completely empty but for pride/sentimental reasons can't be sold. The goal of a city is to move beyond tribalism.

    I did not know Yasser Arafat's family was from Gaza City.


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  6. I wrote a response but the editor crunched it.

    I wonder about what we might call pre modern land tenure systems bleeding into the modern era, with increasingly fractionation ownership. Your 6 person owned house is nothing compared to 70+ owners of a black family farm in the south. And how such relationships are taken advantage of by capital buying a portion and forcing partition lawsuits.

    In Gaza the turmoiled indefinite situation leads me to think the same ends of happening.

    Cf Hernando De Soto and his writings about the underground economy in Latin America primarily because of documentation requirements.

    Eg in Utah, they are tough. I managed to get state insurance (I have bad s* happening which is partly why I don't write much) and voter registration finally. Still haven't attempted the driver's license. I don't own the house, utilities aren't in my name etc.

    Documentation is tough in the US too.

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