Faculty Work
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High Stakes, High Hopes: Urban Theorizing in Partnership
CRP Chair Sophie Oldfield's new book explores how research and assessment were reshaped when framed in neighborhood questions and commitments, and what was reoriented in urban theorizing when community activism and township struggles were recognized as sites of valid knowledge-making.
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Intermunicipal Cooperation and Agreement Formalization
CRP Professor Mildred Warner has coauthored a paper in the Journal of Economic Policy Reform that investigates the effect formalization of cooperation agreements has on the cost of service delivery across NYS local governments.
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Representative Bureaucracy, Age-Friendly Planning, and the Role of Gender, Public Engagement, and Professional Management
In an article published by Administration & Society, CRP Professor Mildred Warner and Xue Zhang explore what leads to more age-friendly cities.
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Factors Limiting U.S. Public Health Emergency Authority During COVID-19
CRP Professor Mildred Warner coauthors this paper published in the International Journal of Health Planning and Management exploring how new limits on emergency public health authority raise concerns about how states and localities will prevent and respond to future public health challenges.
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Cross-Agency Collaboration to Address Rural Aging: The Role of County Government
An article posted by the Journal of Aging & Social Policy explores how county governments, by supporting cross-agency collaboration and encouraging civic engagement, can link the age-friendly domains regarding built environment, service delivery, and community together to help address age-friendly issues and support rural aging.
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Planning for Climate Transformations
This special issue of the Journal of Planning Literature invites scholars to consider how planning research can inform transformative climate initiatives and how planning itself needs to evolve to better support climate transformation.
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Community Development, Volume 54, Issue 4
Together with colleagues, CRP Professor Mildred Warner stewarded this special issue focused on the role of schools in community development.
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Integrating Social and Ecological Considerations in Floodplain Relocation and Restoration Programs
In a paper published by Socio-Ecological Practice Research, CRP Assistant Professor Linda Shi, Ph.D. student Shanasia Sylman, and coauthors argue that more integration between buyout processes and post-buyout land management practices can help produce synergistic outcomes for both the environment and residents who either remain or relocate.
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Age-Friendly Cities in Latin America: A Human Ecological Framework
Coauthored by CRP Professor Mildred Warner, this paper published in Geriatrics argues that a broader view could offer new strategies for promoting age-friendly cities in the Global South.
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Challenging Austerity Under the COVID-19 State
In a special issue on "The State and the Covid Crisis," the Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society publishes Warner's research with Paige Kelly and Xue Zhang that explores how COVID-19 led to new policy approaches that expanded government investment.
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Linking Urban Planning, Community Environment, and Physical Activity: A Socio-Ecological Approach
In a paper published by the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, CRP Professor Mildred Warner and coauthor Xue Zhang (Ph.D. RS '18) explore the links between planning and public health.
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Report Highlights Zoning Reforms that Could Improve Montana's Housing Supply
The Frontier Institute has released The Montana Zoning Atlas 2.0, part of the National Zoning Atlas project led by CRP Professor Sara Bronin, which advocates for bold, pro-housing reforms on a statewide scale, The Center Square reports.
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Ash Trees Are Vanishing. So Is a Basket Maker That Has Depended on Them for 168 Years.
In an opinion piece for The New York Times, CRP Professor Thomas J. Campanella reflects on the history of The Peterboro Basket Company, which is set to shut down.
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The Intimate City: Walking New York
CRP Professor Thomas J. Campanella guides author Michael Kimmelman on a walking tour through Brooklyn neighborhoods, now included in this new collection.
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Equitable Buyouts? Learning from State, County, and Local Floodplain Management Programs
CRP Assistant Professor Linda Shi coauthors a paper published in Climatic Change examining five leading U.S. state, county, and local buyout programs to see what they teach us about redesigning future federal policies.
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Spreading the Gospel of Induced Demand
CRP Assistant Professor Nicholas Klein coauthors research, published in Transfers Magazine, which aims to reorient transportation investments away from the idea that construction solves congestion.
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UCLA Institute of Transportation Studies "Spreading the Gospel of Induced Demand" Interview
Seth Reichert, a UCLA M.U.R.P. student, interviews CRP Assistant Professor Nicholas Klein and others about traffic congestion and induced demand.
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Urban Containment as Smart Growth
The just-published Handbook on Smart Growth contains a chapter, "Urban Containment as Smart Growth," coauthored by John Carruthers alongside doctoral student Hanxue Wei and Lucien Wostenholme (B.S. URS '23).