Topic: Zoneamento e Uso do Solo

Message from the President

New Logo, New Commitment to Impact
By George W. McCarthy, Fevereiro 1, 2016

Back 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 over whether or not to appear in a suit and tie. My Ph.D. adviser provided some excellent guidance. “I’m not going to tell you whether to wear a suit or not, but consider whether you want the audience to remember what you say or what you wear.” It was a helpful reminder that if one has a message to deliver, it is best to package it in a way that improves the chances that it will be received and understood. In the end, I wore the suit and tie, and I recorded a useful lesson in the sometimes subtle, sometimes not-so-subtle interplay of form and content.

From time to time, think tanks like the Lincoln Institute need to consider whether they are packaging content in a way that draws people to read and use it. Over the last year, we have taken a careful look at how we present and disseminate our research and policy analysis. We started in January 2015 with a newly reimagined Land Lines, designed to make the magazine more compelling to a broader audience. Our first redesigned issue featured a dramatic aerial photograph of the Colorado River Delta, where a “pulse flow” released from upstream dams in 2014 allowed water to flow down its dry old path to the Sea of Cortez for the first time in decades, stimulating efforts to restore the native ecosystem that had existed under different land use patterns in the river’s watershed. We also started hiring journalists to write compelling narratives that connected our research and policy analysis to the people whose lives would be improved by better land use practices.

The redesign of Land Lines and our Policy Focus Reports are a small part of a larger effort the Lincoln Institute is making to disseminate our formidable arsenal of research and ideas more widely. An ongoing public outreach effort, clear and crisp, will facilitate the impact we want our work to have on policy and on people. In August, we launched a multiyear campaign to promote municipal fiscal health as the foundation from which local governments can deliver the goods and services that define a high quality of life for residents. Our researchers, staff, and partners are working across disciplines to elevate this important issue, while building new, cross-cutting efforts to address climate change and resilience; developing state-of-the-art scenario planning tools; and probing the nexus of land policy and water, or of land use and transportation.

This month, we are taking another step to disseminate our ideas more effectively by introducing a new Lincoln Institute logo, tagline, and mission statement:

Finding answers in land: helping to solve global economic, social, and environmental challenges to improve the quality of life through creative approaches to the use, taxation, and stewardship of land.

The logo retains the Lincoln “L” within a symbolic outline of a land section, with a more modern, open design that invites new audiences to discover our work. The tagline and mission statement make explicit what has always been true: that good land policy can help address some of the most vexing global challenges, such as climate change or poverty and financial stress in the world’s cities.

We are not reinventing the Lincoln Institute, but aiming to introduce our work to broader audiences and to clarify the threads that connect seemingly disparate topics, such as the link between land conservation and climate change mitigation. Our “refresh” will culminate later this year, when we launch our redesigned website, with a format that allows us to convey new narratives about how land policy can shape a better future for billions of people.

This issue previews two important new books that upgrade our presentation of subjects we have been probing for decades. In A Good Tax, Joan Youngman makes a clear, strong case for the property tax—the most important and least understood source of revenue for local governments. This magisterial treatment of a difficult topic is rendered in lucid prose by the Lincoln Institute’s chair of Valuation and Taxation. The chapter on school finance, featured in this issue, defends the tax that people love to hate in service of a public good that defines the fortunes of future generations.

Nature and Cities—edited by George F. Thompson, Frederick R. Steiner, and Armando Carbonell, the Lincoln Institute’s chair of Planning and Urban Form—explores the economic, environmental, and public health benefits of ecological urban design and planning. With essays by New York City’s High Line designer James Corner and other leading landscape architects, planners, and architects around the world, Nature and Cities offers an erudite and visually captivating treatment of a topic that is urgent in the face of climate change and urban population growth.

As you will see, we will continue to serve our long-time partners and friends with rigorously researched and well-written content. But we also will expand the network of researchers, policy makers, and practitioners who will apply our research findings in ways that we can only imagine. Because in the end, our collective endeavor is to improve the lives of all who call this planet home. And we know that it all starts on land.

2016 Urban Economics and Public Finance Conference

Maio 6, 2016 | 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Cambridge, MA United States

Offered in inglês

The economic growth and development of urban areas are closely linked to their revenue sufficiency and fiscal prospects. This research seminar offers a forum for new academic work on the interaction of these two fields. It provides an opportunity for specialists in each area to become better acquainted with recent developments and to explore their potential implications for synergy.


Details

Date
Maio 6, 2016
Time
8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Location
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
113 Brattle Street
Cambridge, MA United States
Language
inglês
Downloads

Keywords

Desenvolvimento Econômico, Economia, Habitação, Inequidade, Uso do Solo, Planejamento de Uso do Solo, Valor da Terra, Tributação Imobiliária, Governo Local, Tributação Imobiliária, Finanças Públicas, Ordem Espacial, Tributação, Urbano, Valoração, Tributação de Valores

Course

Video Classes on Urban Land Policy

Offered in espanhol


The video classes are multimedia treatments of diverse topics related to urban land policy. Developed to support both moderated and self-paced courses of the Program on Latin America and the Caribbean’s distance education, they are also well suited to generate discussion in neighborhood associations, professional associations, public entities and other groups interested in these topics. Videos are presented primarily in Spanish.


Details

Language
espanhol

Keywords

Estimativa, Cadastro, Computadorizado, Desenvolvimento, Desenvolvimento Econômico, Economia, Meio Ambiente, Planejamento Ambiental, SIG, Habitação, Mercados Fundiários Informais, Infraestrutura, Lei de Uso do Solo, Monitoramento do Mercado Fundiário, Regulação dos Mercados Fundiários, Uso do Solo, Planejamento de Uso do Solo, Valor da Terra, Tributação Imobiliária, Tributação Base Solo, Temas Legais, Governo Local, Mapeamento, Planejamento, Tributação Imobiliária, Finanças Públicas, Políticas Públicas, Favela, Ordem Espacial, Desenvolvimento Sustentável, Tributação, Desenvolvimento Urbano, Melhoria Urbana e Regularização, Urbanismo, Valoração, Recuperação de Mais-Valias, Tributação de Valores

Course

Vacant Land, the Compact City and Sustainability

Maio 7, 2016 - Maio 25, 2016

Free, offered in espanhol


In recent years, vacant land has acquired great importance in the definition of land policies. Housing programs need vacant land and an increased demand for its purchase ends up in land value increments that often make programs unfeasible. This course, offered in Spanish, aims to present alternatives for the management of vacant land in the definition of land policies.


Details

Date
Maio 7, 2016 - Maio 25, 2016
Application Period
Abril 11, 2016 - Abril 24, 2016
Language
espanhol
Cost
Free
Educational Credit Type
Lincoln Institute certificate

Keywords

Habitação, Valor da Terra, Planejamento, Políticas Públicas, Desenvolvimento Sustentável, Valoração

Course

Vacant Land, the Compact City and Sustainability

Novembro 10, 2014 - Novembro 24, 2014

Free, offered in espanhol


In recent years, the idea of vacant land has acquired great importance within the definition land policy. As housing programs require the use of vacant land, the demand for such land grows, resulting in elevated values that often make these programs unfeasible. This course, offered in Spanish, takes a closer look at alternatives for vacant land management in land policy.


Details

Date
Novembro 10, 2014 - Novembro 24, 2014
Application Period
Outubro 13, 2014 - Outubro 29, 2014
Language
espanhol
Cost
Free
Registration Fee
Free
Educational Credit Type
Lincoln Institute certificate

Keywords

Habitação, Valor da Terra, Planejamento, Políticas Públicas, Desenvolvimento Sustentável, Valoração