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  1. Joshua McWhirter is a researcher, writer, editor, and educator focused on built environments, urban governance, public memory, and the politics of adaptive reuse. Currently, Joshua is a PhD student in Global Urban Studies at Rutgers University-Newark, where he is researching the confluence of commercial vacancy and social crisis in New York ...

  2. Joshua McWhirter is a writer, editor, educator, audio producer, and musician based in New York City. His work examines how places, infrastructures, and digital platforms mediate culture and politics (and vice versa).

  3. Listen: A Just Transition For The Building Sector w/ Architecture Lobby’s GND Working Group. Since 2011, Failed Architecture has been providing an inclusive platform for critical urban discourse, fuelled by unconventional narratives from an international network of contributors.

  4. Location: Brooklyn · 139 connections on LinkedIn. View Joshua McWhirters profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion members.

  5. 14 de sept. de 2022 · Joshua McWhirter is a writer, researcher, and audio producer based in New York City. Currently, he is a PhD student in Global Urban Studies at Rutgers University-Newark; an editor for the media collective Failed Architecture; and a part-time lecturer at Parsons School of Design.

  6. 27 de abr. de 2022 · Joshua McWhirter, Urban Omnibus. Big Tech Pays to Supersize LinkNYC and Revive Broken Promise to Bridge Digital Divide. by Gabriel Sandoval and Joshua McWhirter, Urban Omnibus April 27, 2022, 4:00 p.m. Three-story 5G-transmitting towers are coming soon to a corner near you — doubling down on bringing free Wi-Fi hotspots to areas outside Manhattan.

  7. 15 de mar. de 2021 · Joshua McWhirter is the Managing Editor of Urban Omnibus. Memory Loss Interview Politics Race. A Monumental Shift. By Joshua McWhirter, idris brewster, and Glenn Cantave March 15, 2021. A group of artists and creative technologists wield augmented reality to insert women, people of color, and LGBTQ+ icons into the landscape of public memory.