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Land Lines, April 2024
Revista Land LinesAbril 2024Edited by Katharine WrothThis issue explores cities rethinking street surfaces in response to climate change, factors influencing home buyers to consider climate risk, the work of Seattle's Black Home Initiative to...
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Fellows in Focus: Demystifying Land Value Capture, from Colombia to California
Revista Land LinesMayo 2024By Jon Gorey, May 9, 2024An interview with urban economist and former Lincoln Institute fellow Néstor Garza
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Q&A: Fellows in Focus
Revista Land LinesMarzo 2024By Jon Gorey, March 15, 2024Lincoln Institute fellows discuss their recent work, their research interests, and the things that keep them up at night
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Fellows in Focus: Exploring the New Economics of Downtown
Revista Land LinesMarzo 2024By Jon Gorey, March 15, 2024Economist Lindsay Relihan studies the connections between remote work, retail habits, and the shape of our cities
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How Seattle’s Black Home Initiative Is Addressing Affordability and Inequity
Revista Land LinesFebrero 2024By Amanda Abrams, February 20, 2024As part of the Connecting Capital and Community initiative, a network forms in the Puget Sound region
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Mayor’s Desk: Seeing New Opportunity in Scranton
Revista Land LinesFebrero 2024By Anthony Flint, February 13, 2024On the challenges and opportunities of guiding a postindustrial city that has some surprising claims to fame
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Moving Beyond Conventional Economic Development Practice
An Asset-Based Framework for Sustainable CommunitiesDocumentos de trabajoEnero 2024Haegi Kwon, Lincoln Institute of Land PolicyMany factors contribute to growing inequalities in the United States. This report focuses on how economic development policies and practices may contribute to more equitable cities and regions. It...
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Equity in Green Infrastructure
Documentos de trabajoEnero 2024Nathaniel R. Mattison and Kyle McKenneyMany municipalities introduced their first stand-alone green infrastructure (“GI”) plans in the late 2000s and early 2010s, specifically as a means of achieving compliance with water...
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Is Economic Development Working? Rethinking Local Approaches to Growth
Revista Land LinesFebrero 2024By Jon Gorey, February 9, 2024Traditional economic development approaches often produce uneven growth that can deepen disadvantage and exacerbate longstanding inequities, but prioritizing the well-being of residents can lead to very different outcomes.
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Agriculture in the Colorado River Basin States
Challenges and Implications for the FutureDocumentos de trabajoDiciembre 2023Nike Opejin, Faith Sternlieb, and Catherine Van DykeThe Babbitt Center report, Agriculture in the Colorado River Basin States: Challenges and Implications for the Future, examines the challenges confronting agricultural producers in the Colorado River...
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