As Americans have taken action to try to end racism and institutionalized biases, the spotlight inevitably turned to architecture, which has had a poor record of advancing women and people of color. That quest for equity has resurrected a recurring debate over the elaborate, years-long licensure process, which Monica Ponce de León, dean of the School of Architecture at Princeton University and principal of her firm MPdL Studio, characterizes as “not a path but a series of roadblocks.”
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