Jennifer Hock is an architectural and urban historian who studies 20th- and 21st-century cities.
She is especially interested in the way the built environment is shaped by the everyday actions of urban residents and movements for social, cultural, and political change. Her writings on Jane Jacobs, race, and urban renewal have appeared in the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians and the Journal of Urban History. Her book project explores the design politics of civil-rights-era Boston, charting the impact of racial justice activism on the design and planning strategies of the period. She earned a Ph.D. in architecture from Harvard University, an MA in architectural history from the Courtauld Institute at the University of London, and a BA in English and art history from Yale University. Before coming to 足球游戏_中国足彩网¥体育资讯 as part-time faculty in 2014 and full-time faculty in 2015, she taught at Middlebury College.