In Architecture and the Right to Heal, Esra Akcan calls for architecture to take an active role in healing communities affected by socioeconomic, political, and environmental disasters. Akcan frames these processes by discussing buildings and spaces in relation to climate change mitigation and transitional justice. Focusing on lands held by the former Ottoman Empire, Akcan highlights the ongoing struggle to heal after internal social, state, and business-led violence ranging from enforced disappearance to mass extinction. Putting forth the concept of resettler nationalism as a source of displacement and partition, she argues that while architecture and urban planning have been weaponized to segregate and subjugate minorities throughout history, they could instead confront systemic violence and make accountability and reparations possible. For Akcan, healing constitutes a matter of rights as well as a holistic notion of justice that addresses the intersections of social, global and environmental issues, and one that can be achieved through architecture. By locating spaces of political and ecological harm, Akcan advocates for healing on individual, communal, and planetary levels.
Industry Reviews
"Animated by a compelling ethos, Architecture and the Right to Heal challenges the limits of architectural discourse and extends cutting-edge debates in the global field of memory studies on restoration, transitional justice, and potential healing. It stands in a long tradition of critical enlightened thought and breaks new ground at the intersection of architecture, memory studies, human rights, and urban studies." - Andreas Huyssen, author of Memory Art in the Contemporary World: Confronting Violence in the Global South "By connecting architecture to regimes of power and domination as well as forms of resistance and repair, Esra Akcan's work provides a much-needed catalyst to stimulate greater dialogue about the consequences and ethics of architecture amongst practitioners, theorists, scholars, artists, and activists." - Mabel O. Wilson, author of Negro Building: Black Americans in the World of Fairs and Museums