Susanne Cowan PhD.

Susanne Cowan CEL Mentor

Mentor

Susanne Cowan is currently a post doctorate of Architecture and Urban History, with a joint appointment between the Sam Fox School and the College of Arts and Sciences. She recently received her Ph.D. at University of California, Berkeley in the History of Architecture and Urbanism. Her research focuses on the relationship between urban design and the social conditions of cities, particularly regarding participatory democracy as a method for making city planning and policy decisions.
In her dissertation, “Democracy, Technocracy and Publicity: Public Consultation and British Planning, 1939-1951”, Cowan explores how architects and town planners created a forum for democratic debate about new planning policies. She recently completed an oral history documentary film, “Design as a Social Act,” which examines how designers have approached the social needs of users into the design process. In her most recent work, she has been tracing the ways that planning policies in de-industrializing cities have shaped the process of urban decay and/or gentrification, and what positive or negative impacts urban design interventions have had on social and economic conditions of residents.
Her interest in participatory design grows from her commitment to professional activism in the design of the built environment, demonstrated in her work as an environmental educator for Americorps, and her training as a facilitator for collaborative policy-making.