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Inclusive Spaces: Levelling the playing field

17 March 2021, 2:00 pm–3:00 pm

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With over 30 million children forcibly displaced across the globe, can play spaces provide places of refuge, equity and inclusion?

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

The Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment

Emergencies of forced displacement are prevalent across the globe, as of 2019, 40% of the 79 million people forced out of their homes were children. However, research often ignores the plight of urban refugee children who have limited access to resources and rights within the built environment.

Using Kitengela, a peri-urban town in Kenya as a case study, we’ll explore how play spaces can become significant places of safety, social integration and developmental progress.

Through the process of storytelling and digital mapping, we’ll look at the material and spatial characteristics which promote the naturally occurring play culture – while also foregrounding the issues that prevent both refugee Congolese children and host Kenyan children from accessing play in an inclusive, equitable manner.

This work has been developed by Marie Williams, based in the UCL Institute of Global Prosperity, through the process of co-design, in collaboration with local researchers and over 200 participants in 2020.

About the Speaker

Marie Williams

Woman smiling outside, wearing a hooded fleece jacket and multicoloured scarf
Marie Williams is a senior product development engineer, designer and academic who has adopted co-design principles to collaboratively create contextual solutions to a variety of social and environmental challenges our world faces. A finalist to the Institute of Engineering Female engineer of the year, her playful career has seen her collaboratively create innovative solutions within a range of industries, ranging from aerospace, to nuclear building design, to corporate social responsibility and most importantly play.


In 2016 she launched Dream Networks and began a journey to enable inclusive play4all children through the process of co-design. To date Dream Networks has collaborated with businesses, schools and communities in the UK and East Africa to bring play to over 4,000 children. She is a PHD student at the Bartlett Institute of Global Prosperity and an exchange scholar at Yale School of Architecture. Through her situated, participatory co-design research project, she hopes to generate accessible and tailored play solutions that enable children from the Kenyan and Refugee community in Kitengela thrive through play.