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ARPA Journal is a biannual digital publication that serves as a public forum for debate on applied research practices in architecture.

Issue 05, Conflicts of Interest

Please Own a Piece of It

Dong-Ping Wong in conversation with Archie Lee Coates

Staying afloat with + POOL.

Issue 04, Instruments of Service

Inside Infrastructure

by Curt Gambetta

Ideologies of engagement, from anthropology to architecture.

Issue 04, Instruments of Service

Owning the Sky

by Anab Jain and Jon Ardern, Superflux

An invisible architecture of civilian drones.

Issue 03, Performance

By Default

by Forrest Meggers

Behind the modern curtain wall, and beyond the central stack.

Issue 03, Performance

Organic Algorithm, Organic Urbanism

by Travis Jared Marmarellis Bunt and Mathew Staudt, with Tat Lam and Timmie King Hong Tsang

Re-processing Beijing’s hutong villages.

Issue 03, Performance

Efficiency As Productivity

A conversation with Craig Schwitter

Actually, we have extra.

Issue 03, Performance

How Do Geographic Objects Perform?

by Neyran Turan

Toward a new materialism.

Issue 02, The Search Engine

Counter Intuition

A conversation with Benedict Clouette

Searching on unstable ground.

Issue 01, Test Subjects

Informed Speculation

by Rachel Armstrong

An ill-tempered foundation for Venice.

Issue 01, Test Subjects

Sandbox Infrastructure

By Matthew Wisnioski and Kari Zacharias

Field notes from the arts research boom.

Issue 01, Test Subjects

The Trouble with Certainty

by Avigail Sachs

An op-ed on the wickedness of application.

14_SMStanford Prison Ex_App-1 LABORATORY SERIES. No.14. Stanford Prison Experiment application for approval of non-medical research involving human subjects, 1971. In an attempt to study the psychological effects of institutionalized power in the prison system, the experiment randomly assigned twenty-four male students (all of which were deemed the “most” healthy and stable) roles as prisoners and guards. Beginning with the arrest of participants in their homes without warning, prisoners were fingerprinted, booked and stripped of all personal possessions. Guards dressed in khaki uniforms and dark sunglasses monitored the prisoners behind bars in the basement of a Stanford University building. The simulation only lasted six days as prisoners were continually taunted, deprived of sleep and stripped naked. Photo Courtesy of the Stanford Prison Experiment
LABORATORY SERIES. No.14. Stanford Prison Experiment application for approval of non-medical research involving human subjects, 1971. In an attempt to study the psychological effects of institutionalized power in the prison system, the experiment randomly assigned twenty-four male students (all of which were deemed the “most” healthy and stable) roles as prisoners and guards. Beginning with the arrest of participants in their homes without warning, prisoners were fingerprinted, booked and stripped of all personal possessions. Guards dressed in khaki uniforms and dark sunglasses monitored the prisoners behind bars in the basement of a Stanford University building. The simulation only lasted six days as prisoners were continually taunted, deprived of sleep and stripped naked. Photo Courtesy of the Stanford Prison Experiment
A+R+P+A Journal
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Talk about money with us! Issue 05, "Conflicts of Interest," Abstracts due Sep 1. bit.ly/1CUsLVz . https://t.co/7ZkPd7q4VU

Tue July 12, 2016 18:16

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