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  1. Equitably Developing America's Smaller Legacy Cities

    Investing in Residents from South Bend to Worcester
    Notas de Políticas Públicas
    Maio 2021
    Erica Spaid Patras, Alison Goebel, and Lindsey Elam

    Former industrial and manufacturing hubs like Dayton, Ohio, and Gary, Indiana—known as legacy cities—need not choose between economic growth and equity, as growth is most durable when it...

  2. The Empty House Next Door

    Understanding and Reducing Vacancy and Hypervacancy in the United States
    Notas de Políticas Públicas
    Agosto 2020
    Alan Mallach

    Vacant and abandoned properties are a familiar part of the American landscape that can devastate entire neighborhoods, diminishing the value of nearby properties. More extreme cases may cause severe...

  3. Antiguas ciudades industriales

    Construir un renacimiento equitativo
    Notas de Políticas Públicas
    Maio 2020

    Las antiguas ciudades industriales, que alguna vez impulsaron la industria y la prosperidad, perdieron millones de residentes y empleos en el s. XX debido a la economía cambiante. Con...

  4. America’s Legacy Cities

    Building an Equitable Renaissance
    Notas de Políticas Públicas
    Março 2020

    Legacy cities have been at the center of some of America’s most historic achievements, and they possess a strong civic spirit and culture of innovation at a time when these qualities are most...

  5. Improving Tax Increment Financing (TIF) for Economic Development

    Notas de Políticas Públicas
    Fevereiro 2019
    David Merriman

    Tax increment financing (TIF) is a popular economic development tool across the United States, but it often falls short of its promise to revitalize struggling neighborhoods. In this four-page Policy...

  6. The Future of America’s Middle Neighborhoods

    Setting the Stage for Revival
    Notas de Políticas Públicas
    Novembro 2018

    Often overlooked, middle neighborhoods matter—both to the people who live in them and to their cities and regions—and solutions demand engagement not only from the neighborhood itself but also from the city, region, and state.

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