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  1. Lincoln Institute a partner in Urban Anchors conference

    Comunicados de prensa
    Septiembre 27, 2007
  2. Report cites challenges in planning "megaregions"

    Comunicados de prensa
    Septiembre 10, 2007
  3. Lincoln Institute names China program director

    Comunicados de prensa
    Mayo 16, 2007
  4. In furor over eminent domain, an alternative process

    Comunicados de prensa
    Abril 14, 2007
  5. The History and Purpose of Tax Increment Finance Policy in Wisconsin

    Do Wisconsin Tax Increment Finance Districts Stimulate Growth in Real Estate Values? Do They Contribute to Sprawl?
    Documentos de trabajo
    Mayo 2007
    Russell Kashian, Mark Skidmore, and David Merriman

    Like other U.S. states, tax increment financing (TIF) is an important component of the development policy landscape in Wisconsin. While the guidelines for the use of TIF are similar to those that...

  6. Municipal Fiscal Structures and Land-Based Growth in the Phoenix Metropolitan Area

    Documentos de trabajo
    Enero 2007
    Carol E. Heim

    This case study examines municipal fiscal structures in the Phoenix metropolitan area, with a focus on Scottsdale, Chandler, and Fountain Hills. It explores implications of the quest for sales tax...

  7. Land Policies and Their Outcomes

    Libros
    Mayo 2007
    Edited by Gregory K. Ingram and Yu-Hung Hong

    This book presents the main contributions to a Lincoln Institute conference, “Land Policies for Urban Development,” held in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in June 2006. The conference was...

  8. Land Lines, July 2007

    Revista Land Lines
    Julio 2007
    Edited by Ann LeRoyer

    This issue explores the lodging of rural migrants in China’s urbanizing villages; the unforeseen consequences of U.S. property assessment caps; international trends in the use of eminent domain...

  9. Land Lines, April 2007

    Revista Land Lines
    Abril 2007
    Edited by Ann LeRoyer

    This issue looks at the ubiquity of slums and informal land markets in developing nations across Latin America, Asia, and Africa; the need for a well-functioning property tax system in the Anglophone...

  10. What Happens When a Large City Doesn't Have a Property Tax But Attempts to Enact One

    A Case Study of Mesa Arizona
    Documentos de trabajo
    Abril 2007
    Jeffrey I. Chapman

    Mesa, a city with a population of approximately 450,000, is the largest city in the United States without a property tax. It has also grown very rapidly in the last 25 years, although now its growth...

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