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Urban Ecologies on the Edge: Making Manila’s Resource Frontier Book Talk

  • Georgiou Library, NYU East Building 5th Floor 239 Greene Street New York, NY, 10003 United States (map)

Organizer: Sulo: The Philippine Studies Initiative at NYU and NYSEAN

Type/Location: In person / New York

Description:

Laguna Lake, the largest lake in the Philippines, supplies Manila's dense urban region with fish and water while operating as a sink for its stormflows and wastes. Transforming the lake to deliver these multiple urban ecological functions, however, has generated resource conflicts and contradictions that unfold unevenly across space. 

In Urban Ecologies on the Edge, Kristian Karlo Saguin tracks the politics of resource flows and unpacks the narratives of Laguna Lake as Manila's resource frontier. Provisioning the city and keeping it safe from floods are both frontier-making processes that bring together contested socioecological imaginaries, practices, and relations. Combining fieldwork and historical accounts, Saguin demonstrates how people—powerful and marginalized—interact with the state and the environment to produce the unequal landscapes of urbanization at and beyond the city's edge. 

Kristian Karlo Saguin is an Associate Professor of Geography at the University of the Philippines Diliman whose research cuts across various socio-ecological questions in urban, agrarian and environmental studies.

Registration:

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