Battle Readings is a regularly updated compilation of articles, essays, and opinion pieces relevant to the themes of the Battle of Ideas.
Choose a theme from the listing on the left to narrow your search, or view all readings.
Jane da Mosto and Caroline Fletcher, Umberto Allemandi & Co, 15 December 2004
Monderman is one of the leaders of a new breed of traffic engineer - equal parts urban designer, social scientist, civil engineer, and psychologist. The approach is radically counterintuitive: Build roads that seem dangerous, and they'll be safer.
Tom McNichol, Wired, December 2004
Removed from any political context, the result of urban memory practices is often simply the celebration of attachment to place for its own sake.
Austin Williams, Future Cities Project, 13 May 2004
Sonia Livingstone, Sage, 2003
Christopher Day, Architectural Press, 1 December 2003
Patients, staff and the public should have a say in hospital design, according to the Department of Health. But how can this be done?
Alison Moore, Health Service Journal, 10 July 2003
Health-related problems are strongly associated with the social characteristics of communities and neighborhoods.We need to treat community contexts as important units of analysis in their own right, which in turn calls for new measurement strategies as well as theoretical frameworks that do not simply treat the neighborhood as a “trait” of the individual.
Robert J. Sampson, Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, Vol 46, No 3, 2003
Caught in the Web
"In few places does the free exchange of views take place on so wide a range of issues as at the Battle of Ideas. Whatever the headlines of 2011 prove to be, the Battle of Ideas is where they will be most robustly debated."
Andrew Copson, chief executive, British Humanist Association