Urban Social Coffee

Urban Social Coffee

Urban Social Coffee – Queensway, Bayswater, W2 4YN London, United Kingdom – rated 4.9 based on 43 reviews "Fantastic Coffee an Australian friend...

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Housing and Urbanism MA/March – AA School

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MPhil/PhD Human Geography and Urban Studies

Review analysis
food   staff   value   ambience  

Route One Students with MSc Human Geography and Urban Studies (Research) will take the following specified courses: (* denotes a half unit course) Year One Training courses Compulsory (not examined)  Staff/Research Students Seminars Compulsory (examined) Course(s) to the value of one unit from the list of options available on MSc Human Geography and Urban Studies.

Relevant advanced qualitative research methods course(s) to the value of one unit from the following: Fundamentals of Social Science Research Design*  Qualitative Research Methods* Doing Ethnography* Non-Traditional Data: New Dimensions in Qualitative Research* Special Topics in Qualitative Research: Introspection-based Methods in Social Research* If appropriate, other advanced research methods courses – for example in quantitative methods - may be substituted for these in consultation with supervisors.

Transferable skills courses Compulsory (not examined except where student presentation forms part of the Annual Review or Upgrade process)  Research Project Seminar Presentations by research students of aspects of their own research, stressing problems of theory, methodology and techniques.

Year Two Training courses Compulsory (not examined)  Staff/Research Students Seminars Transferable skills courses Compulsory (not examined except where student presentation forms part of the Annual Review or Upgrade process) Research Project Seminar Year Three Training courses Compulsory (not examined) Staff/Research Students Seminars Transferable skills courses Compulsory (not examined except where student presentation forms part of the Annual Review or Upgrade process) Research Project Seminar Route Two If you have not completed MSc Human Geography and Urban Studies then you will take the following specified courses: Year One Training courses Compulsory (not examined)   Staff/Research Students Seminars Compulsory (examined) Contemporary Debates in Human Geography  Courses to the value of a half unit from the options available on MSc Human Geography and Urban Studies (Research).

Relevant advanced qualitative research methods course(s) to the value of one unit from the following: Fundamentals of Social Science Research Design Qualitative Research Methods* Doing Ethnography* Non-Traditional Data: New Dimensions in Qualitative Research* Special Topics in Qualitative Research: Introspection-based Methods in Social Research* Transferable skills courses Compulsory (not examined) Research Project Seminar Workshop in Information Literacy Year Two Training courses Compulsory (not examined) Staff/Research Students Seminars Transferable skills courses Compulsory (not examined)  Research Project Seminar Year Three Training courses Compulsory (not examined) Staff/Research Students Seminars Transferable skills courses Compulsory (not examined) Research Project Seminar Year Four Training courses Compulsory (not examined) Staff/Research Students Seminars Transferable skills courses Compulsory (not examined) Research Project Seminar At the end of your second year (full-time), you will need to satisfy certain requirements and if you meet these, will be retroactively upgraded to PhD status.

Urban Social

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Urban Social delivery from Bayswater - Order with Deliveroo

Urban Social | Restaurants in Bayswater, London

Review analysis
food  

Coffee and juice get top billing here, but there's more to this smart little café at Whiteleys shopping centre than roasted beans and pulped pulp.

Expect a solid range of both, with the fruit juices including a 'megablast'.

Healthy, we presume.

More orthodox, sweet options include chocolate and banana, chocolate and strawberry, and chocolate and banoffee.

There's a chocolate milkshake too, should you like to get your chocolate kicks via other routes.

Insurgent Regeneration | The Bartlett Development Planning Unit ...

Review analysis
location   food  

The action-research programme Insurgent Regeneration consists of a series of initiatives aiming to explore and critically examine the multiple narratives that accompany processes of urban renewal in ‘decaying’ inner city areas in the global South, where self-organised resident occupations are taking place.

Dr Alexandre Apsan Frediani Lecturer in Community-Led Development in the Global South The Bartlett Development Planning Unit View Alex's Beatrice De Carli Lecturer in Sustainable Design Sheffield School of Architecture, University of by the Bartlett Visiting Research Fellows programme, Beatrice De Carli conducted a research aimed at generating baseline knowledge about the possible intersections between notions of ‘insurgent citizenship’ and ‘urban regeneration’, their potential conflicts and synergies, and their combined role in the refinement of wider concepts of inclusive and sustainable inner-city renewal.

As such it considered how conflicting visions of urban change in decaying inner city areas are articulated by different domains of urban research, through a systemic exploration of literature and study cases that potentially interweave notions of ‘urban regeneration’ and ‘insurgent spatial practices’.

(1) the interpretation of international definitions of ‘urban regeneration’ and ‘urban renewal’ in ‘insurgency’ literature, with a focus on the extent to which struggles of residents and housing social movements have been interpreted as agents of change in contexts where the pressures of state-led and/or market driven regeneration are most imminent.

(2) the extent to which scholarly research on urban regeneration is informed by international debates on ‘insurgent citizenship’ and ‘strategic action planning’; specifically, how present-day literature and experiences in the field of ‘urban regeneration’ address the frictions and disconnects between planned interventions and the needs and aspirations of local residents occupying ‘decaying’ buildings and sites.

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