Building Solidarity Architectures

Collective Care in Times of Crisis

Elisavet Hasa

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On the spatial politics underlying the strategies of state abandonment in cities today.

Based on the foreground of a prolonged financial crisis, global pandemic, structural and racial violence, Building Solidarity Architectures examines how solidarity and decolonial movements are creating spaces of collective care, stepping in as providers of welfare services, and, in multiple contexts, acting as the first responders in support of disenfranchised communities. By defining state abandonment as a constantly resurging logic of withdrawing welfare services and deterioration of welfare infrastructures that predominantly affect the most marginalized groups, the book offers readers a lens to recognise forms of state abandonment in various localities and the potential collective responses to them. The book also delves into the materiality that results from this contestation and is therefore embedded in primary sources such as participant testimonies, activist texts, visuals, and images, to provide a rich and engaging account of what one could call a "lived architecture" of everyday practical, immediate, and coping mechanisms of collective care. It ultimately investigates how mutual aid and solidarity can also function as a material resource that counteracts the materiality of abandonment resurfacing in times of crisis. By exploring solidarity as a way of life, Building Solidarity Architectures helps us envision new places of liberation, reorganise the ways we live together, and reproduce the tools we have created for change to happen.

Elisavet Hasa

Elisavet Hasa is an architect and researcher based in London. She graduated from the School of Architecture at the University of Patras, Greece (2015) and is currently a PhD and Lecturer in Architecture at the Royal College of Art. Her research interests focus on the intersections between social movements, infrastructural domains and the state apparatus. Elisavet is a researcher at the School of Architecture, and also a founding member of Fatura Collaborative, an architecture and research practice, while her work has been presented on many occasions internationally.