TY - JOUR AU - Hill, Kristina PY - 2023/02/23 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - Reciprocity and design for an era of compressed temporal and spatial scales JF - Ri-Vista. Research for landscape architecture JA - ri-vista VL - 20 IS - 2 SE - Thematical section (Current series) DO - 10.36253/rv-14002 UR - https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/ri-vista/article/view/14002 SP - 36-47 AB - <p>Haraway and others have suggested reciprocity with the non-human world is a pathway to un- derstanding our humanness. Two urgent trends accelerate our need for this reciprocity: the first is the COVID-19 pandemic as a harbinger of future pandemics, and the second is our changing planetary climate. Our present time is increasingly becoming a “present-future,” linked irreversibly by scientific models to specific future states of our planet and local regions. At the same time our bodies are co-evolving with a virus in a global reciprocal process with no end in sight, collapsing our sense of scale and separation among bodies. A long view of time in the past could act as a counterbalance to this experience. Bringing the longue durée model of time into our present requires reestablishing our knowledge of a long-term past in which humans adapted to major changes in climate earlier in the Holocene. Forms of future urban adaptation can embody reci- procity by emphasizing strategies that anticipate change rather than seeking to prevent it, leap- ing forward in time to embrace global changes we are no longer able to prevent.</p> ER -