Public Program
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Architecture, Planning, and International LawJacob R. Moore and Anne Rieselbach
Organizers -
GRANTEE
The Architectural League of New YorkGRANT YEAR
2022
Madlener House
4 West Burton Place
Chicago, Illinois 60610
Telephone: 312.787.4071
info@grahamfoundation.org
Architecture, Planning, and International Law is an open-ended series that brings together legal and built environment experts to discuss urgent topics at the intersection of their jurisdictions. Beginning with On Domicide, a program examining the crisis in Gaza through the lens of the destruction of housing, the series covers topics such as cultural heritage, financialization, climate change, and migration. In large part, with Architecture, Planning, and International Law, The Architectural League seeks to encourage disciplinary engagement that reflects critically on destruction and on the thwarting of lifeways from outside of the Global North—resisting the common impulses that lead our professions to privilege construction. How might such resistance be encouraged? International law remains one of the only paths to seek accountability. And it is not only lawyers who make its systems function. Through their stewardship of the built environment, architects, planners, and preservationists can shed light on the techniques, procedures, and consequences of modern urban warfare, exploitation, and abuse. They also have the potential to change them.
Jacob R. Moore is executive director of The Architectural League, overseeing the programmatic, financial, and administrative life of the organization. Moore has particular interests in housing and climate change, for which he has led large teams and multiyear programming in his previous decade-plus of work at Columbia University’s Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture. He is an independent critic and curator, having been a founding editor of The Avery Review, and previously worked at Princeton Architectural Press. Moore has served as a selection panelist for the National Endowment for the Arts, and as a critic and juror for numerous universities and other nonprofit organizations. Moore succeeded former executive director Rosalie Genevro in September 2023.
Anne Rieselbach is the League’s program and membership d irector. Rieselbach directs annual public programs and competitions, including Current Work, Emerging Voices, the League Prize for Young Architects + Designers, and First Fridays, as well as the League’s student and mentorship programs. She also directs special projects, such as the multi-year Folly/Function collaboration with Socrates Sculpture Park and was a member of the organizing team for the Re-envisioning Branch Libraries design study, coorganized by the League and the Center for an Urban Future. Rieselbach has served as a juror for desigNYC, the Lyceum Fellowship, and the Marcus Prize, as well as for many universities, nonprofits, and professional organizations, and serves on the board of directors of Open House New York. In 2019 she received an Arts and Letters Award in Architecture from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and was awarded an honorary membership in the New York Chapter of the AIA.
The Architectural League of New York supports critically transformative work in the allied fields that shape the built environment. As a vital, independent forum, the League stimulates thinking, debate, and action on today’s converging crises of racism, inequity, and climate change, in service of a more livable and just world. Founded in 1881 by a group of young architects, the League works to continuously rethink the allied fields of the built environment, to make them ever more inclusive, equitable, and responsible, meeting the spatial needs of society in meaningful, beautiful, and joyful ways.
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