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Carl Anthony

Carl Anthony (born February 8, 1939) is an American architect, regional planner, social justice activist, and author. He is the founder and co-director of Breakthrough Communities, a project dedicated to building multiracial leadership for sustainable communities in California and the rest of the nation.[1] He is the former President of the Earth Island Institute, and is the co-founder and former executive director of its urban habitat program, one of the first environmental justice organizations to address race and class issues.[2]

Carl Anthony
Born (1939-02-08) February 8, 1939 (age 85)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Alma materColumbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation
Known forEnvironmental justice

Early life edit

Carl Anthony was born in a predominantly African American neighborhood, Kingsessing, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His parents, Lewis Anthony (born William Edwards) and Mildred Anthony (née Cokine), sent Carl and his older brother Lewie to B.B. Comegys, an integrated elementary school in which only about a dozen of the 300 students were African American, rather than the neighborhood school called Alexander Wilson, which was only a block away from their home. They later went on to attend Dobbins Vocational School, where Anthony was enrolled in the carpentry and cabinet-making shop. His teachers were impressed by his drawings and suggested that he transfer to the architectural drafting homeroom, where he fostered his interest in architecture.

Education edit

Anthony graduated from Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation in 1969. Upon his graduation, he was awarded the William Kinne Fellowship, a grant to enrich students’ education through travel. Anthony visited traditional towns and villages in West Africa, studying the ways in which people utilized their few resources to shape their environments.[3]

Early Career: Architect’s Renewal Committee and UC Berkeley edit

Anthony began his professional career in the late 1960s at the Architect's Renewal Committee in Harlem, one of the first community design centers in the United States[citation needed]. Upon his return to the United States from West Africa in 1971, he relocated to California and taught at the University of California, Berkeley as an assistant professor of architecture in the College of Environmental Design, later becoming a faculty member of the university's College of Natural Resources.[4] In 1980 he left UC-Berkeley to work as an architect and urban planner.

Urban Habitat (1989–2000) edit

Anthony served as President of Earth Island Institute from 1991 to 1998. During this time, in spring 1996, he was an appointed Fellow at the Institute of Politics, housed within the John F. Kennedy School of Government, at Harvard University.[4] Alongside his colleague Luke Cole at the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, Anthony founded and published the Race, Poverty, and the Environmental Journal,[5] which was the United States’ first environmental justice periodical.[6] In 1989, Anthony founded Earth Island Institute's Urban Habitat Program,[7] the mission of which is to combine education with advocacy and coalition building to advance environmental and social justice in low-income communities in the Bay Area, with David Bower and Karl Linn, and he served as the initiative's Executive Director until 2000.[8] Anthony directed various projects of Urban Habitat:

  • Bay Area Justice and Sustainability Project: developed and promoted a regional agenda for justice and sustainability while addressing planning policies that lead to inner city abandonment.
  • Leadership Institute for Sustainable Communities: leadership training program for land use policies and practices.
  • Transportation and Environmental Justice Project: advocated for changing the priorities of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District toward addressing the transit needs of low-income communities of color.
  • Brownfields Community Leadership Project: worked with leaders of low-income communities of color in the Bay Area to ensure Brownfields redevelopment addressed their needs.
  • Hunter's Point Environmental Health Project: trained residents and community leaders in Bayview Hunter's Point in environmental health, justice issues, and laws. Partnership with the Southeast Alliance for Environmental Justice and Golden Gate University Environmental Law and Justice Clinic.
  • Parks and Open Space for All People: worked toward revitalizing San Francisco Parks System by focusing on the needs of low-income communities of color, ensuring that a diverse range of people could have access to the parks.[3]

Ford Foundation (2000–2008) edit

In 2000, Anthony joined the Ford Foundation. There, he served as acting director of the Community and Resource Development Unit. He was also Director of the Sustainable Metropolitan Communities Initiative for seven years, and funded the Conversation of Regional Equity, a dialogue between policy analysts and advocates concerning racial justice and sustainability.[9]

Breakthrough Communities (2008–) edit

In 2008, Anthony co-founded Breakthrough Communities, a project of Earth House Center,[10] an advocacy nonprofit for regional equity and environmental and climate justice and is serving as the co-director.[11] Anthony founded Six Wins, an initiative in the Bay Area addressing the mitigation of carbon dioxide emissions.[12]

The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race (2017) edit

Anthony's memoir, The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race, addresses regional equity and climate change.[13]

Publications edit

Written by Anthony edit

  • “The Big House and the Slave Quarter, Part I, Prelude to New World Architecture.” Landscape Magazine. Summer 1976.
  • “The Big House and the Slave Quarter, Part II African Contributions to the New World.” Landscape Magazine. Autumn 1976.
  • “Broadening the Wilderness Movement, African Americans and the Environment," The Wilderness Record. January 1990.
  • "The Inner City as Damaged Land.” City Lights Review 4. San Francisco: City Light Books, 1990.
  • “Social Justice and the Sustainable City.” First International Ecocity Conference, Proceedings. Ed. Chris Canfield. Berkeley, Ca. May 1990.
  • "Protecting Jobs and the Environment in West Berkeley.” Race, Poverty & the Environment/ Urban Habitat Update. Earth Island Institute. April 1991.
  • “Energy Policy and Inner City Abandonment.” Race, Poverty & the Environment. Urban Habitat Program, Earth Island Institute. Summer 1991, p. 3.
  • "Redefining the California Dream, Growth, Justice and Sustainability." EDGE: The Alliance of Ethnic and Environmental Organizations, San Francisco, 1992.
  • "Community Based Approaches to Redevelopment: The Case of West Berkeley.” Hastings West-Northwest Journal of Law and Policy. University of California, Hastings College of Law. Vol. 3, No. 3. Spring 1996.
  • "Making Brownfields Bloom." Land and People, Annual Report. Vol. 8, No. 2. Fall 1996.
  • “Ecology and Justice in the Global Age: Integrating the Vision.” Terrain Magazine. Winter 1998.
  • “The Environmental Justice Movement: A Reflection and a Critique: An Activist’s Perspective.” Power, Justice and the Environment: A Critical Appraisal of the Environmental Justice Movement. Ed. David Pellow. MIT Press, 2005.
  • “Reflections on the Purposes and Meanings of African American Environmental History.” To Love the Wind and Rain: Essays in African American Environmental History. Ed. Diane Glave and Mark Stoll. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005.
  • “Remembering Karl Linn, 1923–2005: Landscape Architect and Founder of the Community Design Movement.” Progressive Planning Magazine. Spring 2005.
  • “Race, Place and the Humane Metropolis.” The Humane Metropolis: People and Nature in the 21st Century. Ed. Rutherford Platt. University of Massachusetts Press, 2006.
  • The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race. New York: New Village Press, 2017.[13]

Mention of Anthony’s work by others edit

  • Walker, Richard. The Country in the City: The Greening of the San Francisco Bay Area. University of Washington Press, 2007. pp. 229–248.
  • Alexander, Christopher. A Pattern Language, Towns, Buildings, Construction. Oxford University Press, 1977. Photographs, pp. 371, 1046.
  • Bullard, Robert D., Johnson, Glenn S., and Torres, Angel O., Sprawl. City, Race, Politics, and Planning in Atlanta. Island Press, Washington DC. p. 13.
  • Conzen, Michael, P., Rumney, Thomas, and Wynn, Graeme, Editors. A Scholar's Guide to Geographical Writing on the American and Canadian Past. The University of Chicago, 1993. p. 445.
  • Di Chiro, Giovanna. “Nature as Community: The Convergence of Environment and Social Justice" in Uncommon Ground: Toward Reinventing Nature, edited by William Cronon, W.W. Norton and Co., 1995. pp. 313, 314.
  • Gottlieb, Robert. Environmentalism Unbound: Exploring New Pathways for Change. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2001. pp. 67–68, 69, 278. See also, Urban Habitat pp. 59, 71–73, 314 n.48.
  • Gottlieb, Robert. Forcing the Spring, The Transformation of the Environmental Movement. Island Press, 1993. p. 200.
  • Grossman, Karl. “Environmental Racism.” The Racial Economy of Science, Toward a Democratic Future. Ed. Sandra Harding. Indiana University Press, 1993. pp. 332, 333.
  • Grossman, Karl. “The People of Color Environmental Summit" in Unequal Protection, Environmental Justice and Communities of Color. Ed. Robert Bullard. Sierra Club Books, 1994. p. 291.
  • Mowrey, Marc and Redmond, Tim. “Environmental Justice.” Not In Our Backyards: The People and Events That Shaped America's Modern Environmental Movement, William Morrow and Company, 1993. pp. 435–36, 437.
  • Snell, Marilyn Berlin. “Karl Linn Cultivates Communities.” Sierra Magazine. May/June, 2001. pp. 30, 31.
  • Szasz, Andrew. EcoPopulism, Toxic Waste and the Movement for Environmental Justice, Social Movements, Protest and Contention, Volume 1. University of Minnesota Press, 1994. p. 195.

Boards, Commissions, and Awards edit

  • 2015: Trailblazer Award from the Sierra Club
  • 2015: UC Davis Community Engagement Award
  • 2014: Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition by Congresswoman Barbara Lee
  • 1999–2001: Co-chair, Community Capital Initiative of the Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development
  • 1997: Josephine and Frank Duveneck Humanitarian Award
  • 1996–1997: President, Board of Directors, Alameda Center for Environmental Technology
  • 1996: Fellow, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard, university
  • 1995: San Francisco Foundation, Humanitarian Award
  • 1995: KQED, Honoree, Black History Month
  • 1993–1996: Chair and Principal Administrative Officer, East Bay Conversion and Reinvestment Commission
  • 1993–1995: Founder, President, EDGE, Alliance of Ethnic and Environmental Organizations of California
  • 1991–1993: President, City of Berkeley, Planning Commission[14]
  • 1990–1998: President, Earth Island Institute

References edit

  1. ^ "Carl Anthony: Earth Day and Environmental Justice - Then and Now | Reimagine!". www.reimaginerpe.org. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  2. ^ Gelder, Sarah Ruth van. "Diverse, Green, Beautiful Cities: an interview with Carl Anthony". YES! Magazine. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  3. ^ a b "CARL ANTHONY / The head of the Earth Island Institute's Urban Habitat Program is an environmentalist who strives to interweave the traditions of Martin Luther King Jr. and John Muir". SFGate. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  4. ^ a b "Carl Anthony | The Institute of Politics at Harvard University". iop.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  5. ^ "Carl Anthony - Mesa Refuge". Mesa Refuge. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  6. ^ NA, NA (2016-04-30). Activists Speak Out: Reflections on the Pursuit of Change in America. Springer. ISBN 9781349627592.
  7. ^ Yuen, Eddie; Bunin, Lisa J.; Stroshane, Tim (1997-09-01). "Multicultural ecology: An interview with Carl Anthony". Capitalism Nature Socialism. 8 (3): 41–62. doi:10.1080/10455759709358748. ISSN 1045-5752.
  8. ^ "Finding Aid to the Urban Habitat Program Records, 1970-2001". www.oac.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  9. ^ "About Earth House - Earth House Center - Oakland, California". Earth House Center -- Oakland, California. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  10. ^ "Carl Anthony: Earth Day and EJ | Reimagine!". www.reimaginerpe.org. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  11. ^ "Board of Directors | Urban Habitat". www.urbanhabitat.org. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  12. ^ "6 Wins for Social Equity Network | Urban Habitat". www.urbanhabitat.org. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  13. ^ a b . www.newvillagepress.net. Archived from the original on 2017-10-22. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  14. ^ "Carl Anthony has spent decades as pioneering activist". SFGate. Retrieved 2017-07-10.

Further reading edit

  • Becher, Anne, and Joseph Richey, American Environmental Leaders: From Colonial Times to the Present (2 vol, 2nd ed. 2008) vol 1 online pp. 29–31.

External links edit

carl, anthony, author, commentator, carl, sferrazza, anthony, american, football, player, karl, anthony, born, february, 1939, american, architect, regional, planner, social, justice, activist, author, founder, director, breakthrough, communities, project, ded. For the author and commentator see Carl Sferrazza Anthony For the American football player see Karl Anthony Carl Anthony born February 8 1939 is an American architect regional planner social justice activist and author He is the founder and co director of Breakthrough Communities a project dedicated to building multiracial leadership for sustainable communities in California and the rest of the nation 1 He is the former President of the Earth Island Institute and is the co founder and former executive director of its urban habitat program one of the first environmental justice organizations to address race and class issues 2 Carl AnthonyBorn 1939 02 08 February 8 1939 age 85 Philadelphia Pennsylvania United StatesAlma materColumbia University Graduate School of Architecture Planning and PreservationKnown forEnvironmental justice Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Early Career Architect s Renewal Committee and UC Berkeley 4 Urban Habitat 1989 2000 5 Ford Foundation 2000 2008 6 Breakthrough Communities 2008 7 The Earth the City and the Hidden Narrative of Race 2017 8 Publications 8 1 Written by Anthony 8 2 Mention of Anthony s work by others 9 Boards Commissions and Awards 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Carl Anthony news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message Carl Anthony was born in a predominantly African American neighborhood Kingsessing in Philadelphia Pennsylvania His parents Lewis Anthony born William Edwards and Mildred Anthony nee Cokine sent Carl and his older brother Lewie to B B Comegys an integrated elementary school in which only about a dozen of the 300 students were African American rather than the neighborhood school called Alexander Wilson which was only a block away from their home They later went on to attend Dobbins Vocational School where Anthony was enrolled in the carpentry and cabinet making shop His teachers were impressed by his drawings and suggested that he transfer to the architectural drafting homeroom where he fostered his interest in architecture Education editAnthony graduated from Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation in 1969 Upon his graduation he was awarded the William Kinne Fellowship a grant to enrich students education through travel Anthony visited traditional towns and villages in West Africa studying the ways in which people utilized their few resources to shape their environments 3 Early Career Architect s Renewal Committee and UC Berkeley editAnthony began his professional career in the late 1960s at the Architect s Renewal Committee in Harlem one of the first community design centers in the United States citation needed Upon his return to the United States from West Africa in 1971 he relocated to California and taught at the University of California Berkeley as an assistant professor of architecture in the College of Environmental Design later becoming a faculty member of the university s College of Natural Resources 4 In 1980 he left UC Berkeley to work as an architect and urban planner Urban Habitat 1989 2000 editAnthony served as President of Earth Island Institute from 1991 to 1998 During this time in spring 1996 he was an appointed Fellow at the Institute of Politics housed within the John F Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University 4 Alongside his colleague Luke Cole at the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation Anthony founded and published the Race Poverty and the Environmental Journal 5 which was the United States first environmental justice periodical 6 In 1989 Anthony founded Earth Island Institute s Urban Habitat Program 7 the mission of which is to combine education with advocacy and coalition building to advance environmental and social justice in low income communities in the Bay Area with David Bower and Karl Linn and he served as the initiative s Executive Director until 2000 8 Anthony directed various projects of Urban Habitat Bay Area Justice and Sustainability Project developed and promoted a regional agenda for justice and sustainability while addressing planning policies that lead to inner city abandonment Leadership Institute for Sustainable Communities leadership training program for land use policies and practices Transportation and Environmental Justice Project advocated for changing the priorities of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission MTC and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District toward addressing the transit needs of low income communities of color Brownfields Community Leadership Project worked with leaders of low income communities of color in the Bay Area to ensure Brownfields redevelopment addressed their needs Hunter s Point Environmental Health Project trained residents and community leaders in Bayview Hunter s Point in environmental health justice issues and laws Partnership with the Southeast Alliance for Environmental Justice and Golden Gate University Environmental Law and Justice Clinic Parks and Open Space for All People worked toward revitalizing San Francisco Parks System by focusing on the needs of low income communities of color ensuring that a diverse range of people could have access to the parks 3 Ford Foundation 2000 2008 editIn 2000 Anthony joined the Ford Foundation There he served as acting director of the Community and Resource Development Unit He was also Director of the Sustainable Metropolitan Communities Initiative for seven years and funded the Conversation of Regional Equity a dialogue between policy analysts and advocates concerning racial justice and sustainability 9 Breakthrough Communities 2008 editIn 2008 Anthony co founded Breakthrough Communities a project of Earth House Center 10 an advocacy nonprofit for regional equity and environmental and climate justice and is serving as the co director 11 Anthony founded Six Wins an initiative in the Bay Area addressing the mitigation of carbon dioxide emissions 12 The Earth the City and the Hidden Narrative of Race 2017 editAnthony s memoir The Earth the City and the Hidden Narrative of Race addresses regional equity and climate change 13 Publications editWritten by Anthony edit The Big House and the Slave Quarter Part I Prelude to New World Architecture Landscape Magazine Summer 1976 The Big House and the Slave Quarter Part II African Contributions to the New World Landscape Magazine Autumn 1976 Broadening the Wilderness Movement African Americans and the Environment The Wilderness Record January 1990 The Inner City as Damaged Land City Lights Review 4 San Francisco City Light Books 1990 Social Justice and the Sustainable City First International Ecocity Conference Proceedings Ed Chris Canfield Berkeley Ca May 1990 Protecting Jobs and the Environment in West Berkeley Race Poverty amp the Environment Urban Habitat Update Earth Island Institute April 1991 Energy Policy and Inner City Abandonment Race Poverty amp the Environment Urban Habitat Program Earth Island Institute Summer 1991 p 3 Redefining the California Dream Growth Justice and Sustainability EDGE The Alliance of Ethnic and Environmental Organizations San Francisco 1992 Community Based Approaches to Redevelopment The Case of West Berkeley Hastings West Northwest Journal of Law and Policy University of California Hastings College of Law Vol 3 No 3 Spring 1996 Making Brownfields Bloom Land and People Annual Report Vol 8 No 2 Fall 1996 Ecology and Justice in the Global Age Integrating the Vision Terrain Magazine Winter 1998 The Environmental Justice Movement A Reflection and a Critique An Activist s Perspective Power Justice and the Environment A Critical Appraisal of the Environmental Justice Movement Ed David Pellow MIT Press 2005 Reflections on the Purposes and Meanings of African American Environmental History To Love the Wind and Rain Essays in African American Environmental History Ed Diane Glave and Mark Stoll University of Pittsburgh Press 2005 Remembering Karl Linn 1923 2005 Landscape Architect and Founder of the Community Design Movement Progressive Planning Magazine Spring 2005 Race Place and the Humane Metropolis The Humane Metropolis People and Nature in the 21st Century Ed Rutherford Platt University of Massachusetts Press 2006 The Earth the City and the Hidden Narrative of Race New York New Village Press 2017 13 Mention of Anthony s work by others edit Walker Richard The Country in the City The Greening of the San Francisco Bay Area University of Washington Press 2007 pp 229 248 Alexander Christopher A Pattern Language Towns Buildings Construction Oxford University Press 1977 Photographs pp 371 1046 Bullard Robert D Johnson Glenn S and Torres Angel O Sprawl City Race Politics and Planning in Atlanta Island Press Washington DC p 13 Conzen Michael P Rumney Thomas and Wynn Graeme Editors A Scholar s Guide to Geographical Writing on the American and Canadian Past The University of Chicago 1993 p 445 Di Chiro Giovanna Nature as Community The Convergence of Environment and Social Justice in Uncommon Ground Toward Reinventing Nature edited by William Cronon W W Norton and Co 1995 pp 313 314 Gottlieb Robert Environmentalism Unbound Exploring New Pathways for Change MIT Press Cambridge MA 2001 pp 67 68 69 278 See also Urban Habitat pp 59 71 73 314 n 48 Gottlieb Robert Forcing the Spring The Transformation of the Environmental Movement Island Press 1993 p 200 Grossman Karl Environmental Racism The Racial Economy of Science Toward a Democratic Future Ed Sandra Harding Indiana University Press 1993 pp 332 333 Grossman Karl The People of Color Environmental Summit in Unequal Protection Environmental Justice and Communities of Color Ed Robert Bullard Sierra Club Books 1994 p 291 Mowrey Marc and Redmond Tim Environmental Justice Not In Our Backyards The People and Events That Shaped America s Modern Environmental Movement William Morrow and Company 1993 pp 435 36 437 Snell Marilyn Berlin Karl Linn Cultivates Communities Sierra Magazine May June 2001 pp 30 31 Szasz Andrew EcoPopulism Toxic Waste and the Movement for Environmental Justice Social Movements Protest and Contention Volume 1 University of Minnesota Press 1994 p 195 Boards Commissions and Awards edit2015 Trailblazer Award from the Sierra Club 2015 UC Davis Community Engagement Award 2014 Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition by Congresswoman Barbara Lee 1999 2001 Co chair Community Capital Initiative of the Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development 1997 Josephine and Frank Duveneck Humanitarian Award 1996 1997 President Board of Directors Alameda Center for Environmental Technology 1996 Fellow John F Kennedy School of Government Harvard university 1995 San Francisco Foundation Humanitarian Award 1995 KQED Honoree Black History Month 1993 1996 Chair and Principal Administrative Officer East Bay Conversion and Reinvestment Commission 1993 1995 Founder President EDGE Alliance of Ethnic and Environmental Organizations of California 1991 1993 President City of Berkeley Planning Commission 14 1990 1998 President Earth Island InstituteReferences edit Carl Anthony Earth Day and Environmental Justice Then and Now Reimagine www reimaginerpe org Retrieved 2017 07 10 Gelder Sarah Ruth van Diverse Green Beautiful Cities an interview with Carl Anthony YES Magazine Retrieved 2017 07 10 a b CARL ANTHONY The head of the Earth Island Institute s Urban Habitat Program is an environmentalist who strives to interweave the traditions of Martin Luther King Jr and John Muir SFGate Retrieved 2017 07 10 a b Carl Anthony The Institute of Politics at Harvard University iop harvard edu Retrieved 2017 07 06 Carl Anthony Mesa Refuge Mesa Refuge Retrieved 2017 07 10 NA NA 2016 04 30 Activists Speak Out Reflections on the Pursuit of Change in America Springer ISBN 9781349627592 Yuen Eddie Bunin Lisa J Stroshane Tim 1997 09 01 Multicultural ecology An interview with Carl Anthony Capitalism Nature Socialism 8 3 41 62 doi 10 1080 10455759709358748 ISSN 1045 5752 Finding Aid to the Urban Habitat Program Records 1970 2001 www oac cdlib org Retrieved 2017 07 10 About Earth House Earth House Center Oakland California Earth House Center Oakland California Retrieved 2017 07 06 Carl Anthony Earth Day and EJ Reimagine www reimaginerpe org Retrieved 2017 07 10 Board of Directors Urban Habitat www urbanhabitat org Retrieved 2017 07 06 6 Wins for Social Equity Network Urban Habitat www urbanhabitat org Retrieved 2017 07 10 a b New Village Press www newvillagepress net Archived from the original on 2017 10 22 Retrieved 2017 07 06 Carl Anthony has spent decades as pioneering activist SFGate Retrieved 2017 07 10 Further reading editBecher Anne and Joseph Richey American Environmental Leaders From Colonial Times to the Present 2 vol 2nd ed 2008 vol 1 online pp 29 31 External links edithttp breakthroughcommunities info https web archive org web 20161230163346 http www earthcityrace net p welcome html http www earthisland org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carl Anthony amp oldid 1219969151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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