Danika Cooper

Assistant Professor in Landscape Architecture at UC Berkeley

Biography

Danika Cooper is Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning. The core of her research centers around the geopolitics of scarcity, alternative water ontologies, and designs for resiliency in the world's arid regions. Her work incorporates historiographical research methods, landscape architecture visualization, and theories of urban infrastructure to evaluate and design for environmentally and socially just landscapes. Specifically, Cooper is focused on finding alternatives to prevailing nineteenth-century conceptions that the aridlands should be overturned through technocratic solutions and neoliberal politics. Her work has been published and exhibited across the world, and she has practiced in both the United States and India. Previously, she was the 2015-2016 Designer-in-Residence teaching fellow at the University of Illinois, Department of Landscape Architecture.

EDUCATION

  • Master of Landscape Architecture, Harvard University Graduate School of Design
  • Master in Design Studies, Harvard University Graduate School of Design
  • Bachelor of Arts in Architecture, Washington University, St Louis

Companies

  • Assistant Professor in Landscape Architecture UC Berkeley (2016)
  • Designer-in-Residence Fellow Department of Landscape Architecture, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2015 — 2016)
  • Creative Director, Content Editor Graduate School of Design, Harvard University (2012 — 2015)
  • Teaching Assistant Graduate School of Design, Harvard University (2012 — 2015)
  • Faculty Member Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology (2010 — 2012)
  • Architect Talati and Panthaky Associates (2007 — 2010)
  • Teaching Position Architecture Summer Discovery Program (2007 — 2007)
  • Education/Public Programming Intern Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum (2006 — 2007)

Videos

Read about executive education

Other experts

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.