Contributors

The majority of the cases in our library were developed in collaboration with international planning practitioners and action researchers around the world, while some cases were developed by our project staff based on their work or cases on which substantial primary materials were available. You can read about some of our case contributors below.*

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Charisma Acey

Charisma Acey is an Associate Professor in the Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of California, Berkeley. Her research focuses on poverty reduction and urban governance, with an emphasis on inequities in basic services delivery and access to water in the context of local sustainability. Her recent and ongoing research includes fieldwork in Nigeria, Ghana and Uganda exploring the human right to water, gender and participatory governance. Acey is the author of The Right to Water: The Role of the Private Sector in Urban Water Sector Reform (Nigeria).

 
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Patrick Brandful Cobbinah

Patrick is a Lecturer in the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, The University of Melbourne. Patrick’s background is in human geography with broad experience in urban and regional planning gained through teaching and research conducted at universities in Ghana and Australia. He was with the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology Ghana in 2016-2019 and Charles Sturt University in 2011-2015, and worked in the areas of urban planning and management, urban resilience, environmental management, regional planning, natural resource management, climate change and development of research packages to guide urbanisation and sustainable environmental development in Africa focusing on Ghana. He has also contributed to collaborative projects with researchers at University of Michigan, USA, University of Waterloo, Canada, Georgia State University, USA, Griffith University, Australia, and Wuhan University, China. He is a member of the Planning Institute of Australia (PIA) and the Ghana Institute of Planners (GIP), University of Michigan Presidential Scholar, a Visiting Scholar at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (STIAS) at Stellenbosch University, Cape Town South Africa, Global Young Academy Fellow, and an Adjunct Research Fellow of the Institute for Land, Water and Society, Charles Sturt University. Patrick has published widely in his research area. He serves on the editorial board of Journal of Urban Affairs. Cobbinah is the author of Negotiating Institutional Pluralism (Ghana).

 
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Nick MacDonald

Nick Macdonald is a relief and development professional with 20 years of experience working on conflict and displacement issues. He works for Mercy Corps helping the organization to use data to make better quality decisions and improve their work in conflict. He teaches conflict and humanitarianism at the University of Oregon and consults with nonprofits in analytics and social impact. MacDonald is the author of Humanitarian Dilemmas: A Case Study on Organization Building in the Wake of Disaster (Sri Lanka).

 
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Faranak Miraftab

Faranak Miraftab is Professor of Urban and Regional Planning with joint appointments in Women and Gender Studies and Geography at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her established transnational feminist urban scholarship focuses on urbanization, citizenship, and insurgent practices of marginalized people based on class, race, and gender in many areas of the world—United States, Middle East, Southern Africa, and Latin America. Her most recent book, Global Heartland: Displaced Labor, Transnational Lives, and Local Placemaking, received the American Sociological Association’s Global & Transnational Sociology Award and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning’s Davidoff book award, and it was a Society for the Study of Social Problems C. Wright Mills book award finalist. Miraftab is currently working on three collaborative projects on intersectional conceptualization of gendered urbanization in global South, co-production of knowledge by academics and urban movements, and trans-local emergent refugee lives across camps and cities in the era of global displacements. She is the author of Asserting the Immigrants’ Right to the City (USA).

 
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Daniel Robison

Daniel M. Robison was born and grew up in Bolivia.  He was an exchange student in Thailand and before graduating from university hitchhiked across Africa with his sister from north to south. After graduating from Kansas State University in Natural Resources Management in 1984 he went to Britain as a Marshall Scholar and in 1987 obtained a Ph.D. at the University of Reading, with fieldwork in tropical Bolivia. His life interest is the sustainable use of the Amazon. Between 1988 and 1993 he did postdoctoral work in the Agroecological Studies Unit at CIAT, Colombia. In 1993 he returned to Bolivia as an independent consultant in Protected Areas Management and Agroecology. He lives and farms in Rurrenabaque, the Amazonian gateway to Madidi National Park. Since 2005 he has been a Professor in the Future Generations Graduate School. Robinson is the author of The Rio Beni Bridge: Collision of Different Visions on Development and the Environment (Bolivia).

 
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Bjørn Sletto 

Bjørn Sletto is an Associate Professor in the Graduate Program in Community and Regional Planning at The University of Texas at Austin. His research focuses on indigenous land rights, environmental and social justice, and alternative planning approaches, both in the United States and in Latin America. He is engaged with research on informality and community development in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, focusing on the role of critical pedagogy for insurgent planning in neoliberal contexts. Bjørn also examines the relationship between pedagogy, planning practice, and environmental and social justice in low-income communities in Texas. He is an author of Insurgent Environmental Planning: Waste Management in Informal Settlements and Community-University Partnerships (Dominican Republic).

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Tim Berke

Tim Berke is a Ph.D. student at the University of Michigan in Urban and Regional Planning. His research focuses on post-conflict development, the built environment and public health and collaborative planning. His current research focuses on alternative solutions to refugee camps. Tim was formally the Country Director for IsraAID’s South Sudan. In this position, he oversaw an array of programs (protection, public health, and livelihoods) to increase the capacity of those working with vulnerable communities and to provide sustainable accompaniment to national service providers implementing their own programs to addressing humanitarian challenges. In the past, he has worked with Forcier Consulting, a research consultancy firm in South Sudan and he was also a program specialist for the South Sudan Committee for National Healing, Peace and Reconciliation. In 2013, he graduated with a dual degree at Florida State University (FSU) in Urban and Regional Planning (MSP) and the other in Public Health (MPH). Berke is the author of Planning in Post-Conflict Settings: The Case of South Sudan.

 
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Jahi Chappell

Jahi is Executive Director at SAAFON (Southeastern African American Farmers' Organic Network). He has consulted for the FAO, the city of Belo Horizonte, and La Via Campesina. He is past Chair of the Agroecology Section of the Ecological Society of America, and serves on the board of the Open Source Seed Initiative. He holds a Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from the University of Michigan. His book about Belo Horizonte, Beginning to End Hunger, was published in 2018. Chappell is the author of Food for All: Policy Linking Food Insecurity and Farmers’ Livelihoods.

 
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Clara Irazábal

Clara Irazábal is Professor and Program Director of Urban Studies and Planning at the University of Maryland. She earned her PhD from the University of California at Berkeley and has two master’s degrees. In her research and teaching, she explores the interactions of culture, politics, and placemaking, and their impact on community development and socio-spatial justice in Latin American cities and Latino and immigrant communities. Irazábal has published academic work in English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian. She is the author of Urban Governance and City Making in the Americas: Curitiba and Portland (Ashgate, 2005) and the editor of Transbordering Latin Americas: Liminal Places, Cultures, and Powers (T)Here (Routledge 2014) and Ordinary Places, Extraordinary Events: Citizenship, Democracy, and Public Space in Latin America (Routledge 2008, 2015). Irazábal has worked as consultant, researcher, and/or professor in Venezuela, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Costa Rica, Chile, Germany, Spain, and Vietnam. She is the author of The Politics of Participation: Metropolitan Region Greenbelt Planning (Colombia).

 
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Rebekah Paci-Green

Rebekah Paci-Green is an Associate Professor of Environmental Studies at Western Washington University where she teaches courses in natural hazards planning and disaster risk reduction. She is also Director of the Resilience Institute, where she oversees projects aimed at reducing disasters and enhancing community resilience. She has worked with countries across Asia to ensure school safety in hazard prone places, and worked with communities in the United States to reduce vulnerability and recover from disasters. Paci-Green is the author of Planning for Earthquake Safe Schools: Prioritizing Retrofits in the Former Soviet Republics.

 
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Ana Paula Pimentel Walker

Ana Paula Pimentel Walker is an Assistant Professor in Urban Planning at the University of Michigan. Her research examines the outcomes of participatory urban governance from the perspective of those living in informal settlements and Afro-Brazilian territories. Pimentel Walker’s research has been funded by the National Science Foundation and the Foundation for Urban and Regional Studies. She received a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of California, San Diego, master’s degrees in both Urban Planning and Latin American Studies from the University of California, Los Angeles, and law degree from Brazil. Pimentel Walker’s research has been published in journals such as Ethos and Economic Anthropology. She is the author of The Point of No Return: Informal Settlement Upgrading (Brazil).

 
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Jennifer Rumbach
Kenya Case

Jennifer Rumbach is an HR Business Partner and LGBTQI+ Specialist at the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and serves as Focal Point to the UN-GLOBE. She has worked with refugees in countries such as Ghana, Egypt, Jordan, Iraq and Nepal. She designed the five-module training program, “Working with LGBTI Persons in Forced Displacement and the Humanitarian Context” and has trained more than 1200 staff in 16 countries. She was a Fulbright scholar to Ghana and co-authored, “Sexual and gender minorities in humanitarian emergencies,” in Larry Roeder (Ed.) Disaster Management and Gender and Sexuality. Rumbach is the author of Persecution and Displacement: Sheltering LGBTQI Refugees (Kenya).

 
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Sam Tabory

Sam was a Master’s student at The University of Texas at Austin at the time of working with the IPCS. He was affiliated with the Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies and the Graduate Program in Community and Regional Planning, where he worked with an ongoing collaboration with community residents, civil society representatives, and government officials in the Dominican Republic. His research interests include pro-poor municipal management and urban governance concerns in the Global South. Prior to graduate school, Sam worked as a project manager for an international non-governmental organization. He is an author of Insurgent Environmental Planning: Waste Management in Informal Settlements and Community-University Partnerships (Dominican Republic).

* Several case contributors asked to remain anonymous.