Blog Archives
Rethinking shrinking cities: Peripheral dual cities have arrived
The Impact of Single-Family Rental REITS on Regional Housing Markets: A Case Study of Nashville
A possible world and the right to the university – Reflections on higher education in the United States
Chapter 18 in the Higher education for diversity, social inclusion and community: A democratic imperative publication.
Reflections of an Activist Scholar
Reflections of an Activist Scholar: Henry Louis Taylor Jr. on The Planners Network‘s online page. The Planners Network is an association of professionals, activists, academics, and students involved in physical, social, economic, and environmental planning in urban and rural areas, who promote fundamental change in our political and economic systems.
The University, Neighborhood Revitalization, and Civic Engagement: Toward Civic Engagement
This essay analyzes and syntheses key theories and concepts on neighborhood change from the literature on anchor institutions, university engagement, gentrification, neighborhood effects, Cold War, Black liberation studies, urban political economy, and city building. To deepen understanding of the Columbia University experience, we complemented the literature analysis with an examination of the New York Times and Amsterdam newspapers from 1950 to 1970. The study argues that higher education’s approach to neighborhood revitalization during the urban renewal age, as well as in the post-1990 period, produced undesirable results and failed to spawn either social transformation or build the neighborly community espoused by Lee Benson and Ira Harkavy. The essay explains the reasons why and concludes with a section on a more robust strategy higher education can pursue in the quest to bring about desirable change in the university neighborhood.