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Detroit y el impuesto sobre la propiedad
February 1, 2016Use-Value Assessment of Rural Land
February 1, 2016El suelo y la ciudad
February 1, 2016Land and the City
February 1, 2016Nuevo logo—nuevo compromiso para impactar
George W. McCarthy, February 1, 2016
In this issue, we debut our logo redesign and preview two important new books by Lincoln Institute program directors: A Good Tax: Legal and Policy Issues for the Property Tax in the United States, by Joan Youngman, and Nature and Cities: The Ecological Imperative in Urban Design and Planning, edited by Armando Carbonell along with Frederick R. Steiner and George F. Thompson.
Land and the City
Edited by George W. McCarthy, Gregory K. Ingram, and Samuel A. Moody
January 2016, English
This book from the Lincoln Institute's 2014 Land Policy Conference examines issues of land use policies and their impact on sustainable urbanization. By 1960, one-third of the world’s population lived in urban areas, and in 2007 the world’s urban population passed the halfway mark. All projected world population growth through 2050 will be urban, by which time two-thirds of the worlds people will depend on urban environments to meet their social, economic, and housing needs. The extent to which these needs will be met depends in many ways by the character of future urbanization defined in large part by land policies, ranging from planning for development or climate change, to the provision of affordable housing or other opportunities for the advancement of urban residents.
Book
City and Regional Planning, Climate Change, Economic Development, Housing, Infrastructure, Land and Property Rights, Land Conflict Resolution, Land Markets, Local Government, Property Tax, Public Finance, Urbanization
January 2016, English
This book from the Lincoln Institute's 2014 Land Policy Conference examines issues of land use policies and their impact on sustainable urbanization. By 1960, one-third of the world’s population lived in urban areas, and in 2007 the world’s urban population passed the halfway mark. All projected world population growth through 2050 will be urban, by which time two-thirds of the worlds people will depend on urban environments to meet their social, economic, and housing needs. The extent to which these needs will be met depends in many ways by the character of future urbanization defined in large part by land policies, ranging from planning for development or climate change, to the provision of affordable housing or other opportunities for the advancement of urban residents.
Book
City and Regional Planning, Climate Change, Economic Development, Housing, Infrastructure, Land and Property Rights, Land Conflict Resolution, Land Markets, Local Government, Property Tax, Public Finance, Urbanization
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