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Infrastructure Investment: Appraisal, Biases, and Politics
Revista Land LinesAgosto 2022By José Gómez-Ibáñez, Zhi Liu, August 17, 2022Given the high cost of infrastructure investments, picking the right projects is important. The Lincoln Institute book "Infrastructure Economics and Policy: International Perspectives" describes the development of cost-benefit analysis and the effects of
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Who Should Provide Infrastructure? On Regulation, Privatization, and State-Owned Enterprises
Revista Land LinesJunio 2022By José Gómez-Ibáñez and Zhi Liu, June 30, 2022How best to protect consumers from the lack of competition in the infrastructure market has been a topic of intense debate in infrastructure circles, explain the editors of the recently published Lincoln Institute book "Infrastructure Economics and Policy
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Is Infrastructure Finance Such a Big Headache?
Revista Land LinesJunio 2022By José Gómez-Ibáñez, Zhi Liu, June 29, 2022Building and maintaining infrastructure is notoriously expensive, and governments often struggle to cover those costs. But emerging, innovative approaches to financing can help, explain the editors of the Lincoln Institute book "Infrastructure Economics a
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How Should the Infrastructure Sector Cope with Radical Uncertainties?
Revista Land LinesJunio 2022By José Gómez-Ibáñez and Zhi Liu, June 6, 2022.How are radical uncertainties like climate change, automation, the sharing economy, and the COVID-19 pandemic affecting the performance of infrastructure, and how will they shape infrastructure in the future? We share insights from the recent Lincoln Inst
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Eight Ingredients for a State-Level Zoning Reform
Lessons from Oregon’s House Bill 2001Documentos de trabajoJulio 2021Michael AndersenIn 2019, Oregon passed a first-of-its-kind state law that ordered larger cities and the Portland metro area to rapidly legalize duplexes on all residential lots and fourplexes, triplexes, townhomes,...
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The Eight Deaths of Portland’s Residential Infill Project
Documentos de trabajoJulio 2021Michael AndersenIn 2020, Portland became the largest modern U.S. city to end so-called “single-family zoning,” legalizing up to four market-rate homes on almost any residential lot, or up to six homes on...
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Research, Public Sector Policy Change, Advocacy, Philanthropy and the Private Sector Collide to Create an Affordable Housing and Economic Development Opportunity in Colorado
The Case of indieDwellDocumentos de trabajoJunio 2021Phyllis Resnick and Jennifer NewcomerOn July 6, 2020, modular builder indieDwell opened a factory in Pueblo, Colorado with a capacity of 160,000 square feet of housing and plans for expansion. indieDwell’s journey to Colorado was...
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How Scenario Planning Affects Regional and Local Plans and Planning Practices
An Empirical AnalysisDocumentos de trabajoJunio 2020Arnab Chakraborty and Stephen Averill ShermanThis project investigated how regional scenario efforts can shape regional and local plans. Through document analysis of scenario efforts and selected plans in six regions, plus key informant...
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El escritorio del alcalde
Construir resiliencia climática en BostonRevista Land LinesFebrero 2020Por Anthony FlintMartin J. Walsh nació y creció en el barrio obrero de Dorchester, en Boston. En su segundo mandato como 54.º alcalde de Boston, se centra en escuelas, viviendas asequibles e inmigración, y muchos...
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Mayor’s Desk
Boston Mayor Marty Walsh On the Urgency of Climate ActionRevista Land LinesNoviembre 2019By Anthony Flint, November 8, 2019Boston native and two-term Mayor Martin J. Walsh has become a leader on climate action, from retrofitting city buildings to raising parks and roads. He spoke with Senior Fellow Anthony Flint about...
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