Anthony D. King
Anthony D. King is Emeritus Professor,
Art History and Sociology, State University of New York,
Binghamton and now lives in the UK. He has been Visiting
Professor in Architecture, University of California
Berkeley and was, for five years, Professor, Humanities
and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology,
Delhi. He has also taught at the Architectural
Association and at the Development Planning Unit,
University College, London.
Anthony King has published extensively on
the impact of colonialism, postcolonialism and
globalization on cities and the built environment, and
on the social production of building form. His
publications include Colonial Urban Development (1976,
2006), Urbanism, Colonialism and the World-Economy:
Cultural and Spatial Foundations of the World Urban
System (1990), Global Cities: Postimperialism and the
Internationalization of London (1990), Buildings and
Society: Essays on the Social Development of the Built
Environment (ed.1980, 1984), The Bungalow: The
Production of a Global Culture (1984,1995), Culture,
Globalization and the World-System (ed.1991, 1997, with
translations in Japanese, Arabic, Turkish),
Re-Presenting the City: Ethnicity, Capital and Culture
in the 21st Century Metropolis (ed.1996) and Spaces of
Global Cultures: Architecture, Urbanism, Identity
(2004). Other recent essays are in N. Brenner and R.
Keil, eds. The Global Cities Reader (2006), A. Cinar and
T. Bender, eds. Locating the City: Urban Imaginaries and
the Practices of Modernity (2007), H. Berking, ed.
Cultures of Globalization and the Globalization of
Cultures (forthcoming). With Thomas A Markus, he
co-edits Routledge’s Architext series on architecture
and social/cultural theory.
Besim S. Hakim
Besim S. Hakim, FAICP, AIA, is a
consultant in urban design and an independent scholar.
He is Fellow of the American Institute of Certified
Planners, Member of the American Institute of
Architects, and a Harvard graduate in Urban Design. He
has been researching and writing about traditional codes
from the Mediterranean region since 1975. He has
articulated how those codes shaped the traditional built
environment, so as to provide lessons and models for
contemporary and future architects, urban designers,
city administrators and officials, and lawyers, who are
involved in formulating or revising codes and related
implementation strategies. He has practiced architecture
and urban design and also taught those disciplines for
over two decades, and has lectured widely in the United
States, Europe, North Africa, and Middle East.
His publications include the book
Arabic-Islamic Cities: Building and Planning Principles,
and numerous scholarly and technical studies on codes
spanning the period from the 6th to the 19th centuries
of the Common Era. The results are published in
scholarly refereed journals in the United States and
United Kingdom.
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