Spaces of Disappearance: The Architecture of Extraordinary Rendition

To date, dozens of political histories, participant autobiographies, journalistic accounts, and academic investigations have addressed the many aspects of the War on Terror. Urban Research’s (UR) latest book, Spaces of Disappearance: The Architecture of Extraordinary Rendition by architectural researcher and educator Jordan H. Carver, adds to the national conversation and reckoning with torture by providing an in-depth analysis of the US’s secret network of black site prisons as a project of architectural production.

From the book’s introduction by architectural historian and theorist Felicity D. Scott: “Reflecting back on this recent history of violence through a critical architectural lens, Carver articulates a compelling conceptual and evidentiary terrain and an ethico-political framework through which to return not just to the war in Iraq but also to that in Afghanistan and the even more nebulous War on Terror.”

On September 21, the Center for Architecture welcomes Carver for a conversation with Laura Pitter, Senior National Security Counsel at Human Rights Watch and Amrit Singh of the Open Society Justice Initiative. The conversation will be moderated by Reinhold Martin, Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP.

Speakers:
Jordan H. Carver, Author, Spaces of Disappearance: Architecture of Extraordinary Rendition 
Laura Pitter, Senior National Security Counsel, Human Rights Watch – US Program
Amrit Singh, Head, Accountability, Liberty & Transparency Cluster, Open Society Justice Initiative
Deen Sharp, Co-Director, Terreform

Moderator:
Reinhold Martin, Professor of Architecture, Columbia GSAPP











When: Fri., Sep. 21, 2018 at 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm
Where: Center for Architecture
536 LaGuardia Pl.
212-683-0023
Price: $10
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To date, dozens of political histories, participant autobiographies, journalistic accounts, and academic investigations have addressed the many aspects of the War on Terror. Urban Research’s (UR) latest book, Spaces of Disappearance: The Architecture of Extraordinary Rendition by architectural researcher and educator Jordan H. Carver, adds to the national conversation and reckoning with torture by providing an in-depth analysis of the US’s secret network of black site prisons as a project of architectural production.

From the book’s introduction by architectural historian and theorist Felicity D. Scott: “Reflecting back on this recent history of violence through a critical architectural lens, Carver articulates a compelling conceptual and evidentiary terrain and an ethico-political framework through which to return not just to the war in Iraq but also to that in Afghanistan and the even more nebulous War on Terror.”

On September 21, the Center for Architecture welcomes Carver for a conversation with Laura Pitter, Senior National Security Counsel at Human Rights Watch and Amrit Singh of the Open Society Justice Initiative. The conversation will be moderated by Reinhold Martin, Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP.

Speakers:
Jordan H. Carver, Author, Spaces of Disappearance: Architecture of Extraordinary Rendition 
Laura Pitter, Senior National Security Counsel, Human Rights Watch – US Program
Amrit Singh, Head, Accountability, Liberty & Transparency Cluster, Open Society Justice Initiative
Deen Sharp, Co-Director, Terreform

Moderator:
Reinhold Martin, Professor of Architecture, Columbia GSAPP

Buy tickets/get more info now