Campus in camps
Dans la collection : Atlas des chartes des communs urbains
L'identité du camp intègre les soixante cinq années d’exile des habitants du camp. Elle joue avec l'urbanisme du camp et le transforme "du pur espace humanitaire à un espace politique actif" où peut s'exprimer le droit au retour.
Objet(s) de commun : Espace public Enjeu(x) : Droit au retour Action(s) : Projet urbain
Documentation
Médias (1)
- Au delà du camp, dans le Commun, première partie (Vidéo, 00:05:00)
Métadonnées
Langue du contenu | EN, Autre |
---|---|
Pays | Liban |
Fait partie de | Atlas des chartes des communs urbains |
Média | Fiche |
Visitez le jardin (http://www.campusincamps.ps/projects/01-the-garden), les rues (http://www.campusincamps.ps/projects/06-the-pathways), la municipalité, la banlieue, la piscine (http://www.campusincamps.ps/en/projects/04-the-pool), le stade, le square (http://www.campusincamps.ps/projects/02-the-square), le terrain vague et le pont (http://www.campusincamps.ps/projects/03-the-bridge/
Campus in Camps, is organising the session Into the common (http://www.campusincamps.ps/into-thecommon) at Al Feneiq Center (Dheisheh Refugee Camp). Alessandro Petti, programme director presents the Campus in Camps initiatives as "the result of a collective effort made by the participants in dialogue with community members, associations and collaborators." The identity of this campus is integrating the experience of sixty-five years of exile of the inhabitants of the camp. It is playing with the urbanity of the camp by changing it "from a pure humanitarian space to an active political space", from where to express the right of return.
Visit the garden (http://www.campusincamps.ps/projects/01-the-garden), the pathways (http://www.campusincamps.ps/projects/06-the-pathways), the municipality, the suburb, the pool (http://www.campusincamps.ps/en/projects/04-the-pool), the stadium, the square (http://www.campusincamps.ps/projects/02-the-square), the unbuilt and the bridge (http://www.campusincamps.ps/projects/03-the-bridge/%7C) that suggest "new spatial and social formations beyond the idea of the camp as a site of marginalization, poverty and political subjugation."