Second-Order Preservation

Social Justice and Climate Action through Heritage Policy

2024
Author:

Erica Avrami

An urgent appeal to rethink the heritage enterprise

A critical reassessment of historic preservation policies in the United States, Second-Order Preservation questions the criteria by which value is ascribed to historic buildings and neighborhoods. Erica Avrami stresses the need to reform current preservation practices to serve more diverse publics, encouraging the integration of broader considerations around social justice, equitable land-use planning, and environmental sustainability.

A critical reassessment of historic preservation policies in the United States, Second-Order Preservation brings needed attention to the hierarchical underpinnings and effects of established preservation frameworks. Questioning the criteria by which value is ascribed to historic buildings and neighborhoods, Erica Avrami works to elucidate and transform how—and which—claims to place become codified in and reinforced through public policy.

As she eschews dominant case-study approaches that center the individual object of preservation, such as a discrete building or site, Avrami develops the concept of second-order preservation as a means of integrating broader considerations around social justice, equitable land-use planning, and environmental sustainability. Ranging from municipal to state to national and international levels of governance, her critique of the origins and evolution of heritage policy reveals how this conventional emphasis on the object has contributed to policy tensions and systemic exclusion.

Stressing the need to reform current preservation practices to serve more diverse publics, Avrami encourages a turn to an approach that substantively considers contexts and implications of preservation in the scheme of climate and justice. Second-Order Preservation maintains the interrelation between theory and practice, serving as both a critical reflection and a provocation aimed at advancing more just urban policy agendas.

Erica Avrami is the James Marston Fitch Assistant Professor of Historic Preservation at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation. She is editor of Preservation, Sustainability, and Equity; Preservation and Social Inclusion; and Preservation and the New Data Landscape.

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