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Lubna Alli

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Escuchando PeliculasEscuchando PeliculasTodo Pasa en Tel Aviv (2018) #drama #comedia #peliculas #audesc #podcastPaís Luxemburgo Dirección Sameh Zoabi Guion Dan Kleinman, Sameh Zoabi Música André Dziezuk Fotografía Laurent Brunet Reparto Kais Nashif, Lubna Azabal, Yaniv Biton, Maisa Abd Elhadi, Nadim Sawalha, Salim Dau, Yousef 'Joe' Sweid, Amer Hlehel, Laëtitia Eïdo, Ashraf Farah, Ula Tabari Sinopsis Salam, un apuesto palestino de 30 años que vive en Jerusalén, trabaja en el set de la famosa telenovela palestina 'Tel Aviv on Fire', producida en Ramallah. Todos los días, para llegar a los estudios de televisión, Salam debe pasar por un estricto control israelí. Allí se encuentra con el comandante...2021-06-141h 28Cities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 11: The Patriarchal City ft. Sydney WilsonIn this episode, we focus our discussion around urban feminism amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. Join Victoria, Lubna, Brittany, and guest speaker Sydney Wilson, as they unpack the structural issues that prevent women from fully engaging with their city spaces and brainstorm how both municipal governments and city dwellers can better support women during the pandemic and beyond.2020-09-2556 minCities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 10: Urban Indigeneity and the City ft. Marissa CampbellIn this episode, join us as we discuss urban indigeneity and the city. Although most cities are indigenous, insofar as they are built on the lands of dispossessed first peoples, over the past few decades there has been an increasing trend of urban migration for indigenous peoples in Canada. As of the 2016 census, Indigenous peoples in Canada totaled a little over 1.6 million people, and Canada makes some attempt to celebrate this vibrant indigenous presence. But the parallels with so many other countries – not least Australia – are acute: urban aboriginal people in Canada, despite their traditional associations, are seen and trea...2020-09-2536 minCities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 9: The Affordable City ft. Professor Paul MakdissiPoliticians constantly pledge to make life more affordable for all, as if there has long been a consensus on what constitutes affordable housing in Canada. Yet more and more people are spending over 30 percent of their monthly incomes on housing according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and Statistics Canada. With more people at home as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, utilities such as heat, water and electricity, are also expected to rise by at least ten percent. Canada, like so many other places around the world, is creeping into housing unaffordability. In this episode, we are...2020-09-2443 minCities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 8: The Image and the CityIn theory, urban planners should be considering land use, transportation, housing, and the overall usefulness of public space as they make decisions for the 55% of the global population who live in cities. In practice, urban planners are not considering the city’s residents as they continue to allow developers to build up, but rather it is “the image that has to be planned” says Dr. Mihalis Kavaratzis, an Associate Professor of Marketing at the School of Business, University of Leicester. With global travel coming to a practical freeze, the model of quick and large financial returns that building for touris...2020-09-2429 minCities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 7: The Queer City ft. Ferdie Lopez, Ryan Persadie, Cornel Grey, and Samuel YoonQueer lives are unrepresented and/or misrepresented in our thinking of urbanism. This episode focuses on what queer work and lives means for urbanism by listening to our guests’ work, we hope to consider how queer experiences in the city can help us build a more inclusive city after the pandemic. Dr. Catherine Nash has said that the “post-mo,” that’s post-modern, “generation is less interested in (or does not frequent as often), Toronto’s traditional gay Village and is utilizing alternative urban spaces in ways that rework the gendered and sexualized meanings of those locations and suggests transformative processes ar...2020-09-241h 07Cities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 6: Education and the City ft. Austin Jafri, Joy Henderson, and Dr. Beyhan FarhadiOntario Premier Doug Ford said about his government’s plan to send children back to school during the COVID-19 pandemic that “our children belong in the classroom, with their friends and teachers, learning.” According to a recent poll by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies, forty-one per cent of all respondents said they would be more worried about personally contracting COVID-19 if schools reopen; the CBC has reported that as a result of funding agreements between the province of Ontario and it’s school boards, classroom sizes will be maintained at pre-pandemic levels. This effectively means that you could se...2020-09-241h 18Cities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 5: Race and the City ft. Cheryll Case and Abigail MoriahIn this episode, join your moderator Lubna Alli and guest speakers Cheryll Case (Founder and Principal of CP Planning) and Abigail Moriah (Founder of The Black Planning Project) to discuss all things racism, specifically with accord to how city planning policies and processes, placemaking and the built form is designed with inherently racist principles at hand. We talk about research that confirms trends that are plainly visible in the urban landscape: social polarization, spatial segregation, and a deepening racialization of poverty as defining features of Toronto’s social geography. This, paired with the July 2020 Toronto Public Health data for CO...2020-09-2455 minCities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 4: The Commuting CityIf you live in Toronto, or any one of the world’s cities, you’ve probably suffered through at least a few long commutes. The objective experience sucks a lot too. A Forum Research poll from last year estimates that Toronto residents spend an average 15 days of your life every year in transit. Yet now there’s considerable speculation that COVID-19, as a catalyst for remote work on a larger scale than ever before, has permanently changed the nature of work. While remote work means that many will be able to stay home, less demand on our transit services inevit...2020-09-2432 minCities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 3: The Informal CityIn this episode, join Brittany, Ali, Lubna, and Victoria as we discuss informal settlements as both sites of state neglect and community innovation. Informal settlements manifest extraordinary creative resourcefulness in establishing their own self-regulating service provision, entrepreneurship, and governance. Theorizing the slum as an agent of urban transformation reveals another layer of what the modern city can be – socially, culturally, economically, and materially. For current and future city builders, the so-called rehabilitation of the slums must mean learning how to integrate them into the city.2020-09-2438 minCities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 2: The Isolating CityIn this episode, we will be discussing physical and mental health amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, specifically exploring the question of who has access to well-being during these trying times. Who has become marginalized during this pandemic and why? How can city planners and municipal governments better support those with physical and mental health challenges when designing urban spaces? Join Lubna, Victoria, Ali, and Brittany as they dive into this important discussion. TW: suicide, self-harm, cancer, illness2020-09-1931 minCities UnmaskedCities UnmaskedEpisode 1: The Green CityIn this episode, join Brittany, Ali, Victoria, and Lubna as we discuss democratizing the inequitable access to green space. While efforts to democratize green space has been a goal of cities long before the age of COVID-19, the conversation has dramatically intensified since the pandemic amplified the socio-spatial disparity. While there is hope that this momentum will accelerate the pre-pandemic push for better community gardens, more accessible parks, and green streetscapes, a tangible change must originate from city governments prioritizing them. 2020-09-1932 min