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Conversations with Olmsted: Cotton Kingdom Now - 1.0 PDH (LA CES/HSW)

Social justice, equity, and reform are not new topics for landscape architecture—rather, they are at its origin. Frederick Law Olmsted’s prominent role in shaping public opinion on social reform in the period leading up to and during the Civil War still impacts practice today. Join us for a conversation that recenters the way we tell the story of Olmsted’s work and origins of landscape architecture.

Learning Objectives:

  1. Explore conditions of 19th century cities including intense rural-to-urban migration, industrialization, and immigration, and how these conditions impacted the discipline of landscape architecture.

  2. Discover how, through his writing, Olmsted confronted the institution of slavery and the cotton economy.

  3. Explore how Olmsted’s values of and advocacy for social reform translate to today’s urban and cultural challenges.

  4. Identify how, from its inception, landscape architecture aimed to address societal and environmental conditions through design, and how racial equity and environmental justice issues continue to shape what we do as designers today.

This webinar is free for all members and non-members. Log in using your ASLA username and password for member discounts.

This event is co-hosted by the American Society of Landscape Architects and the National Recreation and Park Association.

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ASLA SKILL | ED for Students