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  1. Land Lines, April 2024

    Revista Land Lines
    Abril 2024
    Edited by Katharine Wroth

    This 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...

  2. Mayor's Desk: Housing and Hope in Cincinnati

    Revista Land Lines
    Mayo 2023
    By Anthony Flint, May 15, 2023

    A candid conversation with Mayor Aftab Pureval on the challenges and opportunities facing Cincinnati

  3. From State Capitols to City Halls

    Smarter State Policies for Stronger Cities
    Enfoques en políticas de suelo
    Febrero 2022
    Alan Mallach

    “Alan Mallach examines the crucial relationships between states and their constituent cities, illustrates how states have hindered equitable revitalization, and offers principles to guide state...

  4. Land Lines, October 2021

    Revista Land Lines
    Octubre 2021
    Edited by Katharine Wroth

    This issue explores the connections between climate change and infrastructure, the role of sustainability in the revitalization of smaller legacy cities, and more.

  5. Legacy Cities

    Three Rust Belt Cities Share Strategies for Equitable Revitalization
    Revista Land Lines
    Mayo 2019
    By Emma Zehner, May 28, 2019

    Leaders from Rochester, New York; Lansing, Michigan; and Akron, Ohio, are collaborating and comparing notes on how to equitably revitalize midsize legacy cities.

  6. Community Investment

    Fulcrum Fellow Romi Hall on Public Health, Anti-Displacement, and Cross-Sector Collaboration in Oakland
    Revista Land Lines
    Abril 2019
    By Emma Zehner, April 14, 2019

    Positioned near the epicenter of California’s housing crisis, Oakland is slightly more affordable than San Francisco and Silicon Valley, but the East Bay city is experiencing rapid gentrification and...

  7. Backyard Brouhaha

    Could Inclusionary Housing Break the YIMBY Deadlock?
    Revista Land Lines
    Febrero 2019
    By Anthony Flint, February 26, 2019

    The movement known as YIMBY, or Yes in My Back Yard, has long argued that more development will reduce housing prices. Critics argue—with some evidence—that things aren't that simple, but some communities are moving forward using inclusionary housing.

  8. Inclusionary Housing

    Creating and Maintaining Equitable Communities
    Enfoques en políticas de suelo
    Septiembre 2015
    Rick Jacobus

    This report illustrates how local governments can realize the full benefits of inclusionary housing policies, which require developers of new market-rate real estate to provide some affordable units...

  9. Land Lines, January 2010

    Revista Land Lines
    Enero 2010
    Edited by Ann LeRoyer

    This issue highlights the expansion of the Lincoln Institute’s China Program to address land policy and urban development matters; the effect of the mid-2000s economic crisis on housing and...

  10. Land Lines, October 2005

    Revista Land Lines
    Octubre 2005
    Edited by Ann LeRoyer

    This issue explores the relationships between economic development, infrastructure, and land taxation in the U.S.; informal settlements, and overall land and housing challenges, in Brazil’s Rio...

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