Next CURE seminar – Alan Mallach, Friday, February 27

Please join us for our next CURE seminar:

Regeneration and Inequality in US Post-Industrial Cities
Alan Mallach.Alan Mallach
senior fellow at the Center for Community Progress in Washington DC

Urban regeneration is a reality in US cities, and during the past 10 to 15 years has spread from coastal cities like Washington DC and San Francisco to the nation’s historically industrial cities, including Baltimore, Pittsburgh and St. Louis, slowing and in some cases reversing decades of population and job loss. At the same time, as these cities have seen renewed growth and redevelopment, they have also become more spatially, economically and racially polarized, as some parts of cities have seen revival but others continued, even accelerated, decline. Based on my ongoing research into the changes in the nation’s post-industrial cities, I will describe the recent trends in these cities, analyze some of the salient forces driving these trends, and offer some thoughts about the challenges they represent for social and public policy.

Friday, February 27, 2015 12:15pm – 1:30pm
Faculty Lounge, 3rd floor Armitage Hall
Lunch will be served 

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CURE seminars are free and open to the public.  No registration is required. 
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Join us for a screening of Do the Right Thing (1989) — Friday, December 19, 2014

CURE and the Digital Studies Center cordially invite you to attend the Screening and Discussion of:

Do the Right Thing (1989)

Written and Directed by Spike Lee

Spike Lee’s third feature takes place on the hottest day of the year on a street in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, when everyone’s hate and bigotry smolders and builds until it explodes into violence.

Discussant: Robert Emmons, Associate Director of the Digital Studies Center and documentary filmmaker.

Friday, December 19, 2014 12pm – 2pm
Faculty Lounge, 3rd floor Armitage Hall
Lunch will be served  (more…)

Next CURE seminar, Lori Minnite: Friday, December 12, 2014 @ 12:15pm

Please join us for our next seminar:

 “Does Concentration Worsen Poverty? The Philadelphia Case” 

LoriLori Minnite, Ph.D.

Associate Professor, Department of Public Policy and Administration
Rutgers University-Camden
Friday, December 12, 2014 12:15pm – 1:30pm
Faculty Lounge, 3rd floor Armitage Hall
Lunch will be served 

 Scholars of political incorporation understand that for African Americans, the foundation of advancement in electoral politics has been the concentration of black voters in jurisdictions where they could engage in mobilization campaigns and out-vote whites simply by virtue of their sheer numbers.  At the same time, scholars of urban poverty have argued that concentration or neighborhood effects negatively impact the life chances of residents of deprived neighborhoods over and above the effects of their individual characteristics. The question is how concentration effects can be good for politics but bad for the very people who need political representation the most, the urban poor.  I explore the problem using micro-data to examine shifting patterns of political participation and poverty for the City of Philadelphia since 1970. (more…)

Join us for screening of “Park Avenue: Money, Power and the American Dream (2012)” — Friday, November 21, 2014

CURE and the Digital Studies Center cordially invite you to attend the Screening and Discussion of: 

Park Avenue: Money, Power and the American Dream (2012)

Directed by Alex Gibney

Written by Alex Gibney, Chad Beck, Adam Bolt

Academy Award-winning filmmaker Alex Gibney presents his take on the gap between rich and poor Americans in Park Avenue: Money, Power and the American Dream.  Gibney contends that America’s richest citizens have “rigged the fame in their favor,” and created unprecedented inequality in the United States.

Discussants: Paul A. Jargowsky, Ph.D., director of the Center for Urban Research and Education, and professor or Public Policy at Rutgers University;

Sheheryar Banuri, economist with the Development Research Group (Macroeconomics and Growth Team), and director of the Behavioral Science Lab at the World Bank.

Friday, November 21, 2014 12pm – 2pm
Faculty Lounge, Armitage Hall
Lunch will be served 

(more…)

Next CURE seminar, Angel Rodriguez: Friday, November 14, 2014 @ 12:15pm

Please join us for our next seminar:

 “To, For, With”…

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Angel Rodriguez
Vice President of Community Economic Development
Asociación Puertorriqueños En Marcha (APM) 
Friday, November 14, 2014 12pm – 2pm
Private Dining Room Campus Center
Lunch will be served 

 Philadelphia is known for being a city of neighborhoods, neighborhoods with very distinct flavors, amenities and people. How do these neighborhoods experience and deal with change? Is change something that is done “to” the neighborhood, done “for” the neighborhood or more importantly done “with” the neighborhood? (more…)