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  1. Land Lines, January 2001

    Revista Land Lines
    Enero 2001
    Edited by Ann LeRoyer

    This issue explores the increasingly common and successful phenomenon of urban farming, and the need for more of it, in the U.S.; participatory budgeting and power politics in Brazil’s Porto...

  2. Land Lines, July 2001

    Revista Land Lines
    Julio 2001
    Edited by Ann LeRoyer

    In this issue, we feature articles on universities as developers and lessons learned from the study of value capture in Latin America.

  3. Land Policy, Land Markets and Urban Spatial Segregation

    Revista Land Lines
    Noviembre 2001
    Allegra Calder and Rosalind Greenstein

    Is urban spatial segregation a consequence of the normal functioning of urban land markets, reflecting cumulative individual choices? Or, is it a result of the malfunctioning of urban land markets...

  4. Revisiting the Sitcom Suburbs

    Revista Land Lines
    Marzo 2001
    Dolores Hayden

    The largest of the post-World War II suburbs were the size of cities, with populations between 50,000 and 80,000, but they looked like overgrown subdivisions. In Levittown, Lakewood and Park Forest,...

  5. Dysfunctional Residential Land Markets

    Colonias in Texas
    Revista Land Lines
    Enero 2001

    Low-income, self-managed homestead subdivisions, called colonias in Texas, are a rapidly expanding form of land and housing production in the United States. In a recently completed Lincoln Institute-...

  6. Universities as Developers

    Revista Land Lines
    Julio 2001
    Allegra Calder and Rosalind Greenstein

    Universities are involved in the development of their immediate neighborhoods for a variety of reasons. For some, it is a matter of self-preservation and marketing, as neighborhood deterioration and...

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