Buscar
Results
-
Land Matters Podcast: Orchestrating Impact: Retiring Scholars Reflect on the Lincoln Institute
Revista Land LinesFebrero 2023By Anthony Flint, February 2, 2023Three scholars retiring from the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy share thoughts on what it takes for a nonprofit organization to have real-world impact.
-
Peking University–Lincoln Institute Center Celebrates 15th Anniversary
Revista Land LinesNoviembre 2022By Katharine Wroth, November 28, 2022The Peking University-Lincoln Institute Center for Urban Development and Land Policy celebrated its 15th anniversary in November 2022. Leaders from both organizations gathered virtually and in person...
-
Mayor’s Desk: Cultivating Climate Resilience in Sierra Leone
Revista Land LinesNoviembre 2022By Anthony Flint, November 10, 2022Freetown, Sierra Leone, is one of seven cities around the world that have appointed chief heat officers as part of a global effort to invest in a climate-resilient future. Mayor Yvonne Aki-Sawyerr...
-
Place Database
Contest Winners Use Maps to Tell Stories of PlaceRevista Land LinesNoviembre 2019By Emma Zehner, November 15, 2019The winning projects from The Place Database Contest explored complex policy questions related to climate mitigation, affordable housing, and sprawl. The contest asked participants to use The Place...
-
Innovation Awards
Curriculum Innovation and Case Study Awards Will Evolve and Promote Land PolicyRevista Land LinesNoviembre 2018By Rohan Kocharekar, November 20, 2018The Lincoln Institute and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning are launching a competition to promote innovative curricula and case studies focused on land policy.
-
Land Lines, July 2010
Revista Land LinesJulio 2010Edited by Ann LeRoyerThis issue provides various reflections on the U.S. foreclosure crisis of the mid-2000s; an analysis of housing reform and homeowner security in Buenos Aires, Argentina; and an overview of the...
-
Message from the President
New Logo, New Commitment to ImpactRevista Land LinesFebrero 2016Back in the Bronze Age, when I was a graduate student, the American Economics Association invited me to present a paper at their annual meeting. At the time, being a nonconformist, I was struggling...