Right to the City Screening Series Presents: Rezoning Harlem

Thu, Mar 5, 2015

7:00 PM

Doctoral Students’ Council Lounge, Room 5414

The Right to the City Film Series features five films based on changing urban landscapes near and far: in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Newark, Detroit and Istanbul. The films focus on issues of processes of urban development defined by inequality —expulsions, redevelopment, and gentrification—and their results.

Rezoning Harlem follows longtime members of the Harlem community as they fight a 2008 rezoning that threatens to erase the history and culture of their legendary neighborhood and replace it with luxury housing, offices, and big-box retail. A shocking expose of how a group of ordinary citizens, who are passionate about the future of one of the city’s most treasured neighborhoods, are systematically shut out of the city’s decision-making process, revealing New York City’s broken public review system and provoking discussion on what we can do about it.

The screening will be followed by Q&A with filmmaker Tamara Gubernat and discussion with Tom Agnotti, moderated by Pilar Ortiz.

Cosponsored by the Sociology, Earth and Environmental Sciences, and Critical Psychology Departments; the Center for Place, Culture and Politics; the Center for Urban Research; the Gotham Center for New York City History; the Center for Human Environments; and The Public Science Project; the Narrating Change Mellon Seminar on Public Engagement and Collaborative Research.

Participants

Tags
Moving Image Urbanism Public Space