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Call for Nominations: International Jane Jacobs Medal

Medal Goes Global For Centennial of Jacobs’ birth

NEW YORK—The Rockefeller Foundation and The Municipal Art Society of New York (MAS) announced that the public nominating process for the 2016 Jane Jacobs Medal is open through June 30, 2016, at www.jj100.org. The 2016 Jane Jacobs Medal is open to international nominees for the first time in honor of the 100th anniversary of Jacobs’ birth. An international panel of judges will evaluate the nominations and the winner will be announced in the fall of this year and honored at a reception in Quito, Ecuador, during the United Nations Habitat III conference in October.

This global search offers an opportunity to highlight and celebrate local leaders working in cities around the world to advance the Jacobsean principles of fostering local economies, building social capital, creating dense, livable neighborhoods, and promoting urban innovation through self-organization.

Nominees should be living individuals whose creative vision for the urban environment has greatly contributed to the vitality of his or her city, and who exemplify the following values and ideas:

  • Open our eyes to new ways of seeing and understanding our cities
  • Challenge traditional assumptions and conventional thinking
  • Advance a creative use of neighborhood knowledge
  • Promote Jacobsean principles of dynamism, density, diversity, and equity
  • Take a common-sense approach to solving complex problems
  • Generate new principles for the way we think about development and preservation in our cities
  • Demonstrate activism and innovative cross-disciplinary thinking
  • Provide leadership in solving common problems
  • Generate creative uses of the urban environment
  • Make global cities places of hope and expectation that attract new people and new ideas

The Rockefeller Foundation created the Jane Jacobs Medal in 2007 to honor activist, author, and urbanist, Jane Jacobs, who died in April 2006 at the age of 89. The medal is administered by The Municipal Art Society of New York and comes with an award. All honorees must be available for travel to Quito, Ecuador, on October 17-20, 2016.

Nominations will be accepted through June 30, 2016, at www.jj100.org, MAS’s digital hub for Jane Jacobs at 100, a six-month global celebration of Jane Jacobs highlighting activities around the world that celebrate Jacobsean principles during the 100th anniversary of her birth.

The Rockefeller Foundation’s relationship with Jane Jacobs dates back to the 1950s, when it launched an Urban Design Studies program that helped foster the emergence of the new discipline of urban design and theory. As part of this initiative, one of the Foundation’s first grants was to the then-obscure writer from Greenwich Village, for the research and writing of her seminal book, the Death and Life of Great American Cities. Now more than fifty years later, Jane Jacobs’ work remains one of the most influential books ever written on urban design.