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Critiquing the Urban Renaissance
Livable Cities 2026 is an international and interdisciplinary conference and publication series. Bringing together universities and scholars globally it examines diverse readings of the history, culture, design, management and experience of life in cities. Previous conferences in have been held in New York, London, Bangalore, Lisbon, Barcelona, Calgary and elsewhere. The 2026 annual conference is organised with the University of Salford, Manchester, UK. It is subtitled ‘Critiquing the Urban Renaissance’.
Examining issues related to the heritage and culture this highlight notice welcome submissions from a variety of fields including, but not limited to:
ART HISTORY | SOCIAL HISTORY | CULTURAL STUDIES | ARCHITECTURE & URBAN HISTORY | ANTHROPOLOGY | CONSERVATION | HERITAGE STUDIES | MUSEOLOGY | PRESERVATION STUDIES | COMMUNITY & REGIONAL HISTORY and more.
Some 25 years ago Richard Rogers proposed an urban renaissance for cities across the UK. Nowhere is that more evident in the United Kingdom than in the ‘modern renaissance city’ of Manchester. A prototypical post-industrial city, it is the birth place of the industrial revolution. One of the UK’s most important historic locations, it is a gateway to the north of England and its iconic country estates and landscapes.
However, alongside these successes are inevitably the long-term problems that typify cities the world over: over tourism, gentrification, unsustainable design, social divisions, immigration and unaffordable housing, to name but a few.
Using these contradictions as a starting point for debate on the relationship between placed based histories, artefacts and communities, this 16th Annual Livable Cities Conference explores the history, design, conservation and experience of life in cities from across the full range of social science disciplines including:
Art & Architectural History, Archeology, Cultural Studies, the Humanities broadly understood, and more.
Tangible & Intangible Heritage: Example themes: Art & architectural history, Community & social pasts, museology, conservation & preservation, heritage studies….
Cultural Studies & the Humanities: Example themes: Cultural traditions, Intergenerational histories, Diasporas & heritage, Intangible heritage preservation….
Architecture, Landscape, Urban Design: Example themes: Architectural design, landscapes and cities, urban design, retrofitting and renovating buildings, public space design, walkable cities….
Technologies + Medias: Example themes: Smart Cities, digital infrastructures, the internet of things, digital equality, privacy and connectedness, ubiquitous computing, big data and city space….
Sociology, Geography, Anthropology: Example themes: affordable housing, community sustainability, participatory planning, migration, urbanization, forced displacement, cultural traditions….
Public Services: Example themes: Community health services, housing provision, access to education, sanitation and environmental health, design and planning for an aging population….
Urban Economics: Example themes: City boosterism, enterprise zones, global cities, affordable housing, urban poverty, urban regeneration, private-public partnerships, development….
Societies, Communities, Cultures: Example themes: Right to the city, race and the city, defensible space, criminology, gentrification, participatory planning, land rights, indigenous communities….
Livable Cities is part of the AMPS Critical Futures research program that encompasses a range of interconnected issues, from architectural history, heritage and cultural studies to urban design, sociology and sustainability. In each of these areas AMPS supports the research of academics focused on issues such as architectural conservation and preservation to affordable housing, accessible design, healthy cities and accessibility.
Heritage – Critical Futures is concerned with exploring the interplay of tangible and intangible heritage with particular interest in placed based study. Cities – Critical Futures reflects the UN World Urbanization Prospects reflecting concerns about growing urbanisation, informal development, urban sprawl, regeneration and the future of post-industrial cities across Europe and North America. Health – Critical Futures engages with global issues such as healthy cities, walkable neighbourhoods, accessible design, design for life, Covid-19 and public spaces, ‘sick building’ research and more. Housing – Critical Futures responds to a global ‘crisis’ in affordable housing provision. It examines dichotomies such as the chronic shortage of affordable housing in London, the displacement of long-standing communities in urbanising China and civil unrest around housing in São Paulo.
Previous & Current Collaborations:
The Royal Institute of British Architects, UNESCO World Heritage Site of Maritime Greenwich, The Royal Parks, FACT, The UN Habitat Program, The Commission of Architecture and the Built Environment, The Faculty of Public Health, UCL Press, Libri Publishing, Vernon Press, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Atelier Herman Hertzberger, The National Housing Federation, the Pubic Health Film Society, the homelessness charity Shelter, Habitat for Humanity and multiple universities internationally.
The Critical Futures program draws upon the AMPS publication network based on the journal and book series with several international publishing houses: Routledge Taylor & Francis | UCL Press | Intellect Books | Libri Publishing | Vernon Press | Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
In addition the work of researchers is shared through the Amps Academic YouTube channel, its series of international conferences and its associated proceedings publications.
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Books | Journal | Proceedings | YouTube | Conferences
Click the button below to submit your abstract.
Fee: $420 USD – Queries: info@amps-research.com