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Preparing the country for a low-carbon future that is economically and racially just is an enormous undertaking. Greening America's Smaller Legacy Cities investigates how local governments in small and midsize older industrial cities can adopt and implement comprehensive sustainability initiatives. It explores three principal policy areas--climate resilience, environmental justice and equity, and green economic development--and shows how their integrated application can serve as the policy foundation for what American scholars call green regeneration. This synthesis of sustainability…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Preparing the country for a low-carbon future that is economically and racially just is an enormous undertaking. Greening America's Smaller Legacy Cities investigates how local governments in small and midsize older industrial cities can adopt and implement comprehensive sustainability initiatives. It explores three principal policy areas--climate resilience, environmental justice and equity, and green economic development--and shows how their integrated application can serve as the policy foundation for what American scholars call green regeneration. This synthesis of sustainability initiatives offers local officials; their state and regional partners; and their nonprofit, business, institutional, and philanthropic collaborators a policy framework and roadmap for regenerating small and midsize legacy cities in an equitable, climate-resilient manner.
Autorenporträt
is a senior policy and research associate in the Research to Action Lab and Metropolitan Housing and Communities Policy Center at the Urban Institute. State and local governments serve as the primary platforms for his applied research, policy translation, and technical assistance work that helps cross-sector leaders adapt and transfer innovative policies and practices. Before coming to Urban, Schilling worked as a municipal attorney, a California legislative fellow, the director of community and economic development for the International City/County Management Association (ICMA), and a research professor of urban planning for Virginia Tech. Schilling's sustainability expertise includes research on HUD's Sustainable Communities Initiative and authoring a seminal American Planning Association article, "Greening the Rust Belt." While at Virginia Tech, he also led the initial design and development of Alexandria, Virginia's Eco City Charter and Initiative. In 2010, Schilling founded the Vacant Property Research Network, a hub for policy and research translation related to regenerating legacy cities.