The Future of National Urban PolicyDuke University Press, 1990 - 405 lappuses The Future of National Urban Policy brings together scholars, policymakers, and journalists to explore the condition of America's cities. The authors focus on policies of the previous five presidential administrations to examine the history of urban policy and offer suggestions for its future. Individual chapters address a variety of topics, including housing, employment, education, the infrastructure of cities, and public policy. |
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1.5. rezultāts no 100.
1. lappuse
... cities . Pat probably would have disagreed with the analyses and conclusions in some of the papers . She would have welcomed a debate . . . she would have been a hell of a good advocate . . . she would have appreciated the need to find ...
... cities . Pat probably would have disagreed with the analyses and conclusions in some of the papers . She would have welcomed a debate . . . she would have been a hell of a good advocate . . . she would have appreciated the need to find ...
3. lappuse
... cities and the related phe- nomena of increased neighborhood blight and housing abandonment . And some would suggest that the growth of welfare payments and related in- kind services have muted the incentive of welfare recipients to ...
... cities and the related phe- nomena of increased neighborhood blight and housing abandonment . And some would suggest that the growth of welfare payments and related in- kind services have muted the incentive of welfare recipients to ...
4. lappuse
... cities - it emphasized economic over social initiatives and the revitalization of places ahead of expanded choices for people . Can We Forge a Comprehensive Urban Policy ? Even assuming a continued decline of resources available to cities ...
... cities - it emphasized economic over social initiatives and the revitalization of places ahead of expanded choices for people . Can We Forge a Comprehensive Urban Policy ? Even assuming a continued decline of resources available to cities ...
5. lappuse
... cities . The constituent groups supporting the majority of their elected officials are nonurban . 5. Cities have too few resources and too many problems to mount a comprehensive set of policies or to join other levels of government in a ...
... cities . The constituent groups supporting the majority of their elected officials are nonurban . 5. Cities have too few resources and too many problems to mount a comprehensive set of policies or to join other levels of government in a ...
6. lappuse
... cities . It also contains a brief look at varied ways to generate an urban policy or policies . Finally , Part 5 contains a comprehensive set of recommendations for future federal policies that acknowledge current re- source , political ...
... cities . It also contains a brief look at varied ways to generate an urban policy or policies . Finally , Part 5 contains a comprehensive set of recommendations for future federal policies that acknowledge current re- source , political ...
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The Future of National Urban Policy Marshall Kaplan,Franklin J. James Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 1990 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
activities administration American approach areas assistance average Boston budget capital CDCS central cities cities commitment concerning Congress continued costs counties decline Department direct distressed early economic effect efforts employment existing families federal federal aid federal government financing fiscal funds future grants groups growth households housing impact important improve income increase indicators infrastructure initiatives institutions interest involvement issues less levels limited living low-income major measure ment metropolitan million minority national urban neighborhood operating organizations past percent political poor population poverty problems programs projects question rates Reagan recent reduce relatively remain rent rental require residents response result role sector shift social Source spending suggest tion trends units urban policy Washington welfare White York
Populāri fragmenti
341. lappuse - Some people feel that the government in Washington should see to it that every person has a job and a good standard of living.
340. lappuse - Some people think the government should provide fewer services, even in areas such as health and education, in order to reduce spending.
65. lappuse - However, in ghetto neighborhoods that have experienced a steady outmigration of middle- and working-class families ... the chances are overwhelming that children will seldom interact on a sustained basis with people who are employed or with families that have a steady breadwinner.
34. lappuse - US Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, National Income and Product Accounts of the United States, 1929-82, Statistical Tables (Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1986), table 3.15, p.
106. lappuse - ... have little to do with the long-run cost of housing capital. Policy analysts should note, however, that the persistent increase in contract rent during a period of substantial new construction suggests that there has been a long-term increase in the rental price of housing capital. Unlike a run-up of energy costs, such a long term trend is not quickly reversed. Over the past...
106. lappuse - The Northeast and the West, areas of vigorous economic expansion, have witnessed the sharpest rent hikes during the decade (Exhibit 7). From 1981 to 1987, real gross rents in the West increased by nearly 19 percent, while those in the Northeast rose approximately 17 percent. More modest rent increases occurred in the Midwest. Only in the South, a region with substantial overbuilding, do gross rents appear to have peaked.
105. lappuse - Gross rent is seemingly the more comprehensive measure, but changes in contract rent have considerable analytical significance. Gross rent, for example, can change as a result of shifting energy prices or other factors that have little to do with the long-run cost of housing capital. Policy analysts should note, however, that the persistent increase in contract rent during a period of substantial new construction suggests that there has been a long-term increase in the rental price of housing capital....
189. lappuse - We can no longer afford to approach the longer-range future haphazardly. As the pace of change accelerates, the process of change becomes more complex. Yet, at the same time an extraordinary array of tools and techniques has been developed by which it becomes increasingly possible to project future trends and thus to make the kind of informed choices which are necessary if we are to establish mastery over the process of change.
128. lappuse - In housing requirements of households of different types and ages, income alone is a poor measure of the ability of a household to secure adequate housing in the private nonsubsidized market. Federal poverty definitions define the income required by various types of households to consume adequate levels of housing, food, and other necessities. By this measure, only 2.1 million (or 28 percent) of the nation's 7.5 million poverty-level renter households lived in public housing or other subsidized rental...
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