Kerb 26:
Homelands

Designed with Sean Hogan.
Published in 2019.

Format
Softcover, 128pp,
210 x 297mm
ISBN
9780648435549

Over the past 600 years, European colonial expansion and resource extraction has reshaped the globe, displacing and marginalising myriads of people. Kerb 26 aims to shine a light on landscape architecture’s complicity in these global conditions and the prospects of those affected by the Western cultural and economic forces.

Landscape architecture is a discipline produced by Western power structures and modes of authority over space. But, by engaging in careful collaboration, landscape architects could begin to work productively with traditional custodians and other groups that Western societies have previously ignored or, worse, suppressed.

Kerb 26 collects together writings on the global conditions and prospects of fragmented, displaced and marginalised peoples as well as the complex realities of often asymmetric, cross-cultural exchange.

Contributors include Revathi Sekhar Kamath, The Firesticks Alliance Indigenous Corporation, Gabriel Díaz Montemayor, Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects, Juliette Anich, Jefa Greenaway, Charles Massy and more.

Kerb 26 was edited by Albert Rex, Jesika Ellul, Julie Demary, Michelle Thomas Zacharias, Rachel Flock, Will Muhleisen


About Kerb

Kerb is an annual cross-disciplinary design journal produced through the department of landscape architecture at RMIT University School of Architecture and Urban Design. Kerb is student-edited and has been produced by RMIT University for close to three decades. ¶ Kerb journal aims to draw its themes from issues pertinent to contemporary landscape architectural discourse, however it enthusiastically supports many contributions from outside the discipline.

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Kerb 27: Selective Perceptions

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Kerb 25 Contested Landscapes + Disruptive Practices