Graduate Student Attends Global Placemaking Summit
Graduate student in Social Work Jia Rowland (BSW ’22) attended the Global Placemaking Summit in Mexico City, November 1-5. Her attendance was made possible by WNMU Student Research and Professional Development funding. “Placemaking is really as simple as it sounds,” said Rowland. “It’s making space. . . In oppressed communities, in indigenous populations, they don’t have bike lanes, they don’t have sidewalks, and that is going to keep people from having third places—places that aren’t workplaces, that aren’t schools . . . places just to be.” The summit brought together people from around the world to “share their experiences and ideas on how to create more livable, inclusive, and sustainable public spaces,” according to the event organizers. Rowland’s interest in placemaking is tied to her own sense of place as a Midwesterner who now calls New Mexico home. “I love New Mexico,” she said, “I love the Gila. I love camping, hiking, being outside,...