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PLANNERS NETWORK (1975 – ?): ADVOCACY PLANNING AND BEYOND Saturday, November 1, 9:45am – 10:45am  (4377/552) Co-Organizers:  CLAVEL, Pierre [Cornell University] pc29@cornell.edu & JOJOLA, Ted [University of New Mexico] tjojola@unm.edu Moderator:  ANGOTTI, Thomas [Hunter College] tangotti@hunter.cuny.edu Panel Participants: THOMPSON, J. Phillip [Massachusetts Institute of Technology] jt71@mit.edu KRUMHOLZ, Norman [Cleveland State University] n.krumholz@csuohio.edu BATES, Lisa [Portland State University] lkbates@pdx.edu LOWE, Jeffrey [Columbia University] jsl2207@columbia.edu REARDON, […]

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The Seventh Generation Social Justice at the Borders by Tom Angotti Progressive Planning at the Border PN 2014 in Ciudad Juárez, México: Thank you for Joining Us at the Border by María Teresa Vázquez Castillo Progressive Planning at the Border by Peter Marcuse The Right to the City: Strategic Approach for the Post-2015 and the Habitat III […]

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The Seventh Generation Transbordering Planning by Clara Irazábal Planning Across Borders Santa Fe: Mexico City’s Challenged Megaproject by María Moreno-Carranco Conservation and Inequalities in Tanzanian Maasailand by Mohammad Sarfaraz Gani Adnan, Barsha Chitrakar, Kartini Kasmuri and Genevieve Wasser Cusco: City of Memory by Miriam Chion The Buffer Zone in Nicosia: Border or Bridge Space? by […]

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The Seventh Generation Don’t Believe the Hype about Mike – Oops, I Mean Bill by Tom Angotti New York City after Bloomberg The Monumental Myths of Michael Bloomberg by Dan Steinberg The Life and Death of Low-Income Co-ops in New York City by Oksana Mironova The Invisible Bicyclists (Hint: you’re not a white man!) by Dorothy Le […]

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The 2014 Planners Network Conference, Planning at the Borders, will take place June 5-7 in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico. Abstracts proposing pre-organized sessions, workshops, individual presentations, posters, or social documentation should be submitted before April 10, 2014 at: pnconference2014@gmail.com. Preference will be given to participatory sessions. For more information visit http://plannersnetwork2014.wordpress.com/

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The Seventh Generation Can labor and community learn to dance together? by Marie Kennedy & Chris Tilly General Building Power: The Los Angeles Black Worker Center Turns Excluded Workers into Forces for Change by Yelizavetta Kofman Risk-Taking and Coalition Politics: Lessons from the Living Wage NYC Campaign by Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer and Erin R. Michaels Building […]

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Conference Recap Bruce Dale: A Planner’s Life by Tony Schuman Orange, New Jersey: Making a Place by Margaux Simmons and Jamy Lasell Placemaking with the University of Orange by Molly Rose Kaufman, Rachel Bland, Mindy Fullilove, and Michele Racioppi Response to Progressive Planning in the American South by Harley Etienne Planning for Disaster Requiem for a […]

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Seventh Generation The South: The Race Culture Sustained by William M. Harris Lack of Diversity in Southern Academia: What Can progressive Planners Do? by Jeffrey S. Lowe The American South Progressive Planning in the American South by Pierre Clavel and Nichola Lowe Flipping the Script: Toward a Transformative Urban Redevelopment Agenda in Chattanooga, Tennessee by Courtney […]

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Seventh Generation New York City after Sandy: Who Benefits, Who Pays and Where’s the Long-Term Planning? by Tom Angotti New York Focus New York Neighborhoods Fight Land Grabs: Public Parks Going to Professional Teams by Donovan Finn  Planners Network Conference Revisiting Equity: The HUD Sustainable Communities Initiative Lisa K. Bates and Marisa Zapata Planning in the Shadows: Unauthorized […]

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Seventh Generation Is the AIA a Place for Design that Matters? By Kathleen Dorgan Design Focus Design for Regenerative Communities by Kyle D. Brown There’s a Whole Lot of Planning Goin’ On: Supporting Citizen Planners and Incorporating Community Vision in Multiple and Overlapping Planning Processes by Eric D. Shaw Three Food Arenas of Self-Help: Arizona’s […]

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Progressive City: Radical Alternatives is an online publication dedicated to ideas and practices that advance racial, economic, and social justice in cities. We feature stories on inclusive urban planning practices, grassroots organizing, and civic action. Our contributors and readers are activists, reporters, practitioners, academics, and community members. Learn more about Progressive City and learn how to submit articles..

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