DOCTORAL ASSISTANT
ARCHITECT
Nagy graduated in architecture from ENSA Paris-Malaquais and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. at ALICE. His research with architectural means seeks to make tangible and legible the entanglement of long-lasting debt policies within the Federal Reserve System, closed-ended and discriminatory urban regulations, and the built environment, focusing on American family homes from 1913 to the present day. The research seeks to decode the invisible legal and financial structures that underlie this entanglement, then provide tools for recoding it to economize resources and empower residents.
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bureau: BP4221