TABLE OF CONTENTS
Organizational Leadership ... 4
Conference Leadership ... 5
President’s Welcome ... 6
Local Host Welcome... 7
About Our Local Hosts ...8-9
2015 Conference Theme ... 10
Conference Highlights
Opening Reception ... 11
Friday Night Receptions & Ceremonies ... 12
ACSP Student Reception ... 12
Plenary Assembly & Keynote Speaker ... 14
Awards Luncheon & Keynote Speaker ... 15
Highlights ... 16
Poster Session & Competition ... 22
Mobile Tours ... 25
ACSP Awards and Prizes ... 28
Book Fair ... 37
At A Glance
Schedule at a Glance ... 38
Meetings at a Glance ... 40
Hotel Floor Plans ... 42
How to Use the App ... 46
Daily Schedules
Thursday ... 55
Friday ... 75
Saturday ... 87
Sunday ... 113
Author/Participant Index ... 122
Advertising
Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy ... 2
Texas Southern University ... 8
Texas A&M University ... 9
Earn AICP Points ... 13
Texas Chapter of American Planning Association ... 15
Liverpool University Press ... 16
Do you have the new app ... 21
SAGE Publications ... 27
ACSP 2016 56th Annual Conference in Portland, Oregon .... 41
Food Systems Planning Scholarship, University at Buffalo ... 48
Cornell University Press ... 49
NYU Wagner ... 50
Indiana University Press ... 51
USC School of Policy, Planning and Development ...52-53
Washington University in St. Louis ... 54
Sustainable Critical Infrastructure, Masdar Institute ...Back Cover
Downtown Skyline from Tranquility Park in the Theater District. Credits: Greater Houston Convention and Visitors Bureau
ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERSHIP
OFFICERS
June Thomas, President University of Michigan (outgoing on 10/22/15) Lois Takahashi, President Elect University of California, Los Angeles (incoming on 10/22/2015)
Weiping Wu, Vice-President/President-Elect
Tufts University
(incoming on 10/22/15) Avis Vidal, Secretary Wayne State University (outgoing on 10/22/15)
Carissa Schively-Slotterback, Secretary University of Minnesota
(incoming on 10/22/15) Clinton Andrews, Treasurer
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
REGIONAL REPRESENTATIVES
Amy Glasmeier, Northeast
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (outgoing on 10/22/2015)
Samina Raja, Northeast University at Buffalo, SUNY (incoming on 10/22/15) William Goldsmith, Northeast Cornell University
Mickey Lauria, Southeast Clemson University
Duden Rukmana, Southeast Savannah State University (outgoing on 10/22/15) Tom Sanchez, Southeast
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
(incoming on 10/22/15) Sanda Kaufman, Midwest University of Wisconsin, Madison
Kazuya Kawamura, Midwest University of Illinois at Chicago (outgoing on 10/22/15) Jane Rongerude, Midwest Iowa State University (incoming on 10/22/15) Christine Bae, West University of Washington Marlon Boarnet, West University of California, Irvine (outgoing on 10/22/15) Richard D. Margerum, West University of Oregon (incoming on 10/22/15) Michael Frisch, Central
University of Missouri, Kansas City Carissa Schively-Slotterback, Central University of Minnesota
(outgoing on 10/22/15) Dawn Jourdan, Central University of Oklahoma (incoming on 10/22/15)
STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES
Vincent J. Reina, Student Rep. University of Southern California James Wood, Student Rep. Florida State University
EX OFFICIO
Rayman Mohamed, Conference Chair Wayne State University
Connie Ozawa, PAB Portland State University Barry Nocks, PAB Clemson University Bruce Stiftel, PAB
Georgia Institute of Technology
EX OFFICIO cont’d
Subhro Guhathakurta, JPER Co-Editor Georgia Institute of Technology Nancey Green Leigh, JPER Co-Editor Georgia Institute of Technology Mark Seasons, Canadian Liaison University of Waterloo
Chris Silver, GPEAN University of Florida
CONFERENCE STAFF
Donna Dodd
Association and Conference Director Cathy Neal
Membership Manager/President’s Assistant
Nicole Smith
Marketing and Promotions Manager Mary Beth Buchanan
Executive Assistant Laura Ervin
Conference Logistics Manager Glenda Fisher
CURRENT TRACK CHAIRS
Rayman Mohamed, Chair Wayne State University Term: 2014-2016
TRACK 1 - ANALYTICAL METHODS AND COMPUTER APPLICATIONS
TRACK 2 - ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
TRACK 3 - ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING & RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
TRACK 4 - GENDER AND DIVERSITY IN PLANNING
TRACK 5 - HOUSING & COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
TRACK 6 - INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLANNING
TRACK 7 - LAND USE POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
TRACK 8 - FOOD SYSTEMS, COMMUNITY HEALTH, SAFETY
TRACK 9 - PLANNING EDUCATION AND PEDAGOGY
TRACK 10 - PLANNING HISTORY
TRACK 11 - PLANNING PROCESS, ADMINISTRATION, LAW AND DISPUTE RESOLUTION
TRACK 12 - PLANNING THEORY
TRACK 13 - REGIONAL PLANNING
TRACK 14 - TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE PLANNING
TRACK 15 - URBAN DESIGN
CONFERENCE LEADERSHIP
NATIONAL CONFERENCE COMMITTEE CHAIR
Jeff Brown [2012-2015] David Hsu[2015-2017] Elizabeth Currid-Halkett [2013-2015] Caitlin Dyckman [2015-2016] Stacy Harwood [2015-2016] Lan Deng
[2014-2016] Shannon Van Zandt[2015-2016]
Sukumar Ganapati [2015-2017] Aysin Dedekorkut [2015-2017] Rebecca Lewis [2014-2016] Ellen Bassett [2014-2016] Ernest Sternberg [2015-2017] Sonia Hirt [2014-2016] Bruce Goldstein [2014-2016] Anne Taufen Wessells [2015-2017] Meghan Gough [2015-2016]
Laura Wolf Powers
[2012-2015] Karen Chapple[2015-2017]
Noreen McDonald
[2014-2016] Zhan Guo[2014-2016]
Jason Brody [2013-2015]
After a long respite we come back to Texas! Houston is a great venue and a chance to assure ourselves of an affordable conference venue as well as warmer weather than many of us have in October. The conference will feature excellent research panels, roundtables, and mobile workshops, as well as a well-organized poster session that presents research findings in a compact, compelling way and will add graphic interest to the proceedings.
A number of people have worked very hard to bring the logistics of this conference together, including the Local Host Committee, co-chaired by Sheri Smith, Texas Southern University, and Cecilia Giusti, Texas A&M. Other parties who devoted countless hours to make this gathering a success are members of the ACSP Conference Committee, chaired by Rayman Mohamed, Wayne State University; numerous track chairs who did yeoman work sorting various abstract submissions and making hard choices about which ones to accept; and dedicated staff, most particularly Conference Director Donna Dodd and her support staff. The ACSP Governing Board, of course, oversees all, with several specific tasks undertaken by its officers. Thanks to all of these, and others, who made this conference possible!
Our main keynoters offer us an opportunity to look at Justice and The City, the theme of the conference, from two vantage points, the state and global levels. John Henneberger, our speaker for the Thursday plenary session, is an advocate for affordable housing in Texas and successfully helped reform the state’s housing laws. He is a 2014 recipient of the prestigious MacArthur Foundation award. Hunter College’s Tom Angotti, former winner of the Davidoff Award, is the speaker for the awards lunch and will help us consider the issue of Justice and The City on a global scale. In a Presidential Session that follows immediately after the awards lunch, Angotti will expand on this theme by discussing his powerful, most recent book, The New Century of the
Metropolis; respondents will include Petra Doan
and Leonie Sandercock.
This year, we celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Paul Davidoff Book Award, set up to honor the memory of advocate planner and social activist Paul Davidoff. In honor of this occasion a special event has been organized for those associated with the award for the last thirty years, to congratulate this year’s winner, and to thank several people who served as selection committee members for more than a few years.
This anniversary is a poignant reminder of the last ACSP conference that Davidoff addressed, with a stirring talk delivered during the luncheon; this was an occasion I remember very well since it took place a few short months before he passed away, and this speech affected me, personally, quite powerfully. In that final speech, as I recall, Davidoff charged urban planning faculty with the task of constantly upholding the causes of racial diversity within the profession’s ranks and social justice in our actions. This was a fitting call to action for this 2015 conference.
Enjoy the conference and enjoy Houston!
June Manning Thomas, FAICP ACSP President, 2013-15 Centennial Professor
Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning
The University of Michigan
WELCOME MESSAGES
WELCOME FROM THE ACSP PRESIDENT
On behalf of the Barbara Jordan – Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs at Texas Southern University and the College of Architecture at Texas A&M University, we want to welcome you to Houston and the 55th Annual Conference of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. Thanks to the hard work of the conference planning team we are excited to offer you a diverse and engaging program.
The theme of this year conference, Justice and the City, is a topic that warrants our attention and it will be discussed in conference sessions, panels, roundtables and addressed by our guest speakers. The theme begins in the 1960s which will forever be remembered as a tumultuous time, a time of change and a time of progress. Fifty years later we will look back to assess the progress we have made from the groundwork our predecessors laid, as we plan for the future. What better place to have this discussion than in Houston, Texas. Houston is ranked by Forbes to be the fastest growing city in the United States and is considered to be the most diverse city in the US; where every ethnic/racial group is a demographic minority. In the next five years we anticipate a city population of 2.5 million and metropolitan area of over 7.4 million. What steps must we now take to ensure social, economic and environmental justice for those that are here and those who have yet to come?
Houston has operated without a comprehensive plan for decades and is the largest un-zoned city in America, but it is far from unregulated, as is commonly assumed. The city is currently developing a General Plan, and is updating its Park and Bike Plans with equity as one of the goals. The city is also transforming its Museum District, envisioning the district’s role as a social
condenser. Amidst these changes, Houston must address the resiliency of its neighborhoods and coastal neighbors as we face natural disasters and climate changes that have an unequitable affect across the region. These topics and more will await your input in locally organized sessions and tours.
As co-chairs of the Local Host Committee we are honored to host the 55th ACSP Conference. While you are here, we hope you enjoy the stimulating discussion but also we want you to take the opportunity to enjoy what Houston has to offer.
Sheri L. Smith, AICP
Department of Urban Planning and Environmental Policy, School of Public Affairs, Texas Southern University smithsl@tsu.edu
Cecilia Giusti
Department of Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning
College of Architecture, Texas A&M University cgiusti@arch.tamu.edu
WELCOME MESSAGES
WELCOME FROM THE LOCAL HOSTS
Sheri L. Smith, AICP
Cecilia Giusti
LOCAL HOST COMMITTEE FOR 2015
Sherry Bame: sbame@arch.tamu.eduElise Bright: ebright@tamu.edu
John Cooper, Jr.: jcooper@arch.tamu.edu Kenneth Joh: kjoh@arch.tamu.edu Edna Ledesma: eledesma@arch.tamu.edu Jeffrey Lowe: lowejs@tsu.edu
Jamie Masterson: jaimieelizabeth@gmail.com
Lalita Sen: Sen_lx@tsu.edu
Laura Solitare: lgsolitare@gmail.com
Shannon Van Zandt: svanzandt@arch.tamu.edu Jessica Varner: j.moniwue1031@gmail.com Wei Li: luwei1120@tamu.edu
Texas Southern University is an urban university by location and
mission. As a Historically Black College/University located in the
inner city of Houston, the university has always been charged with
educating minorities within the urban environment. However, it was
in 1972 when university President Granville Sawyer stated officially
that Texas Southern University was an “urban university”and that
“everything we do, everything we project and all that we anticipate
isto be evaluated in terms of what any given consideration
offers toward the resolution of present problems in the urban
community”.
In that same vein, the faculty and the student body of the Urban
Planning and Environmental Policy Program at Texas Southern
University represent the varied mix of race, ethnicities, and ages
found not only in the US but across the world. The program comes
together with a primary interest in the urban setting; its people, the
natural and built environment. The program’s evolving mission is to
trainpolicy-oriented planners and environmental policy analysts for
leadership positions in planning and environmental policy-related
organizations with a special emphasis on issues of significance to
communities and regions of the southwest. The program’s goal is
to equip future professionals with analytical and policy formulation
skills that will enable them to address with vision and foresight,
the current and future environmental problems caused by human
impact on the environment.
The Department offers two graduate degrees. The Masters
of Urban Planning and Environmental Policy (MUPEP) has
specializations in housing and community development,
environment and land use policy and transportation. The Doctorate
inUrban Planning and Environmental Policy has successfully
prepared students for careers in academics as well as promoting
Planning Policy throughout the United States and abroad.
It’s time to redesign cities & landscapes
The Department of Landscape Architecture & Urban Planning
produces leaders in designing, planning and sustainable community
development — life-long learners with a global perspective.
We offer four graduate degrees and two undergraduate degrees including:
• Bachelor of Landscape Architecture,
• Bachelor of Science in Urban & Regional Planning.
• Two five-year Undergrad/Masters programs: MUP & MLPD. and
• Doctor of Philosophy in Urban and Regional Science.
VIsIt us!
Dept. of Landscape Architecture & urban Planning
Bachelor of Landscape ArchitectureBachelors of Science in Urban & Regional Planning
Master of Landscape Architecure Master of Urban Planning
Master of Land and Property Development Ph.D. in Urban and Regional Science
979.845.1019
laup.arch.tamu.edu
2015 CONFERENCE THEME
This theme takes on all the possible justice issues, social equity,
multiculturalism, environmental activism, advocacy planning, etc. There are several acts that began in 1965 and 2015 is 50 years later...
The 1960s was a time in history where growth and development was rampant around the globe. Focus began to fall on urban renewal and the health of the environment as well as the impacts associated with human activities. The sixties brought about civil rights movements globally and especially here in the United States. As freedom riders made their journey across the south in 1961 protesting the use of segregation in public transportation, urban planning was progressing by introducing zoning for the first time in the state of Hawaii. The year of 1964 brought about the enactment of the civil rights act that banned discrimination based on “race, color, religion, sex or national origin” in employment practices and public accommodations. 1964 was also the year that economic development was brought into the spotlight by President Lyndon Johnson declaring war on poverty. The civil rights movement was hit hard in 1968 due to the assassination of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee. Despite this tragedy, regional planning was evolving and the Intergovernmental Relations Act of 1968 was passed, requiring state and sub-state regional clearinghouses to review and comment on federally assisted projects to facilitate coordination among the three levels of government.
Starting in the 1960s, the beginning of the women’s rights movement resurged forward after being passive during the 1940s and 1950s. The civil rights protests spurred the women of the 1960s to renew the push for equal rights for women as well as minorities in educational and employment fields. Equality in politics, both in the United States and internationally, were also on the agenda for women’s rights. During this time of women’s rights movements, Jane Jacobs made her mark in planning by introducing “The Death and Life of Great American Cities” into the planning profession.
The world became increasingly conscious about the health of the environment during this time in history. In 1960, the first clean water act was passed by Congress as well as the first implementation of a Public Health
Service study on air pollution from cars. The end of the sixties brought one of environmental health’s most influential accomplishments, the passing of the National Environmental Policy Act by Congress.
The 1960s will forever be known as a time of progress. Fifty years later we will look back to assess the progress we have made from the groundwork established in the 60s as we plan for the development that will take place in the next fifty years.
HIGHLIGHTS
Houston Public Library, Julia Ideson Building
550 McKinney, Houston TX 77002 http://houstonlibrary.org/location/julia-ideson-building
The Julia Ideson Building has been a Houston landmark since it opened in 1926. The 18,181 square foot Spanish Renaissance structure served as the Houston Central Library until 1976 and has long been regarded as one of the city’s most prominent public buildings. Named for Houston’s first professional librarian, the three-story, 66,000-square-foot Ideson Library sits just across McKinney Street from City Hall. In 2009, a multi-million-dollar project began to complete the building’s initial design, which was abandoned due to the Great Depression, and restore the library to its original grandeur. New elements were also added including a state-of-the-art archival footage wing and work areas, plus an outdoor garden and reading room that complement the original, historic structure. The building serves not only as a place for research and work, but
Directions from the
Hyatt Regency
also as a venue for exhibits, meetings and special events.
The Houston Metropolitan Research Center inside the Ideson boasts a valuable collection, including 4.5 million photographic images of historic events and everyday life in Houston and the surrounding area, 150,000 sets of architectural drawings from more than 250 architects, 7,000 volumes of rare children’s books, 12,000 volumes of rare books and 3,000 rare pamphlets in the John Milsaps collection. Numerous rare books, such as a fifteenth-century illuminated Book of Hours from Flanders, a 1520 edition of The Odyssey, a 1615 edition of Don Quixote and first editions of Moby Dick and Alice in Wonderland are also part of the collection.
ACSP OPENING RECEPTION
Houston Public Library, Julia Ideson Building
Thursday, October 22, 7:00pm – 9:00pm (
ticket required)
The Julia Ideson Library is only .30 miles or an 8 minute walk from the Hyatt Regency Hotel. Turn left after exiting the hotel’s Louisiana Street exit. Head north on Louisiana for 2 ½ blocks. Turn left (west) on McKinney and proceed for 2 blocks. The main entrance to the library will be on your left.
For those driving in, entrance to the underground parking garage is located on Lamar between Bagby and Brazos below the Central Library. Parking is $2/ hour with a $16/day maximum. Limited parking is available on the street. Shuttle
The Hyatt Hotel and the Crowne Plaza Hotel both provide a complimentary shuttle bus for guests of the hotel for locations within a two mile radius. If you require special travel assistance to the Library for this reception, please contact the concierge in advance of your departure to make sure the shuttle is available for you.
HIGHLIGHTS
Canadian Schools Meet & Greet
8:00pm, McCormick & Schmicks, contact Ren Thomas rae.thomas@gmail.com
University of California, Berkeley Reception 7:30pm-9:30pm, at the Hyatt, Arboretum 4
All Texas Planning Schools Reception hosted by the University of Texas at Austin, Texas A&M University, Texas Southern University and the University of Texas at Arlington 7:30pm-9:30pm, at the Hyatt, Arboretum 3
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University, New York University, Columbia University, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, University of Pennsylvania and Cornell University Combined Reception for Alumni and Friends
7:30pm-9:30pm, at the Hyatt, Imperial West
Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, University of Michigan, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and University of Illinois at Chicago Joint Alumni and Friends Reception
7:30pm-9:30pm, Downtown Club at Houston Center, 1100 Carolina Street
Routledge Reception
7:30pm-9:30pm, at the Hyatt, room not confirmed at time of printing. Check the app schedule!
JAPA Reception In Honor of the JAPA Editorial Board 7:30pm-9:30pm, at the Hyatt, Mesquite Room UCI, UCLA and USC Joint Reception
7:30pm - 9:30pm, at the Hyatt, Dogwood Room
ALUMNI & CELEBRATION RECEPTIONS
Friday, October 23
SATURDAY NIGHT STUDENT RECEPTION
Starting out going southwest on Louisiana Street toward Polk Street. Turn left onto Polk Street.
Turn left onto San Jacinto Street. The Lucky Strike is on your right, 1201 San Jacinto Street, Houston, TX 77002
Saturday, October 24, 7:00pm - 9:00pm
All students invited. No ticket required!As part of ACSP’s annual conference, the board of directors wishes to invite all student members to a complimentary meet-and-greet at Lucky Strike in downtown Houston. As some of you may know, Lucky Strike is an upscale bowling and dining venue that caters to young professionals. The student representatives on the board like to organize these events as a chance for students to break away from the conference and do something informal and fun.
ACSP will provide each student with one free drink ticket (usable for beer, house wine, certain spirits, and soft drinks), and there will be assorted snacks and finger foods. We have not reserved any lanes for bowling, but students are free to do so!
Vincent Reina and James Wood, your student representatives, will be in the lobby of the Hyatt at 6:45 so students can walk over to Lucky Strike together (it is about 0.4 miles from the hotel).
Here is the link to Lucky Strike’s Houston website: http://www.bowlluckystrike.com/locations/texas/houston/
Directions from
the Hyatt Regency
Houston
DAVIDOFF AWARD 30TH ANNIVERSARY RECEPTION
Friday, October 23, 6:00pm – 7:30pm in Arboretum I
The Paul Davidoff Book Award Committee invites all past winners of the prestigious ACSP Paul Davidoff Book Award, their peers and colleagues to join us in celebrating the 30th Anniversary of the establishment of the award. In addition, we will be commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the publication of Paul Davidoff’s seminal work, “Advocacy and Pluralism in Planning,” Journal of the American
Institute of Planners, (now known as Journal of the American Planning Association) volume 31, issue 4, 1965. There will be a short
55
th
Annual Conference ~ 2015
October 22-25 ~ Houston, Texas
Earn AICP
CM
Credits
Attention AICP!
Track all the sessions you attend here in Houston and remember to log
them online.
This year, ACSP applied for pre-approval of the ACSP 2015 conference for AICP Certification
Maintenance (CM) credits.
ACSP has submitted more than 200 sessions for the 2015 conference in Houston. Attendees
with AICP certification will be able to attend sessions at the ACSP Annual Conference and be
assured ahead of time that this attendance will count toward CM, and that s/he will be able
to apply for these credits in the month after the conference. Watch for these symbols after
the session title which indicate how many points each session is worth: worth:
CM
I ##
If you have problems reporting your CM credits or have general questions about the CM
program, please contact AICPCM@planning.org. APA’s customer service associates are
available to assist you.
1. Login using your ID# and password.
2. Select My CM log- located on the left-hand side of the screen
3. Select Add CM-Registered Credits
4. Searching Activities by Date: on the left of the calendar view, please use the “previous” and “next”
options to locate the month. On the right of the calendar view; please use the “previous” and “next”
options to select the year in which the event occurred
5. Use the calendar to find the event on the date in which it occured
6. To select, click on the name of the activity
7. A pop-up box will appear. Please note: if this is a multi-part event you will have the option to select from
a list of activities
8. Please rate, add a comment (optional), and click on the Ethics statement and answer
9. Click submit and the CM credits should appear in your CM log
HIGHLIGHTS
KEYNOTE: JOHN HENNEBERGER
Housing Advocate and Co-DirectorTexas Low Income Housing Information Service
PLENARY ASSEMBLY & STUDENT AWARD PRESENTATIONS
The right to choose, the right to stay, the right to equal treatment, the right to have a
say: Local government, neighborhoods of color and the Fair Housing Act
Sponsored by Rice | Kinder Institute for Urban Research
Thursday, October 22, 4:15pm - 5:30pm
Room: Imperial West, 3rd Floor
Thanks to our Conference Sponsor!
Rice University’s Kinder Institute for Urban Research is
a “think and do” tank that advances understanding of
the challenges facing Houston and other urban centers
through research, policy analysis and public outreach. By
collaborating with civic and political leaders, the Kinder
Institute aims to help Houston and other cities.
John Henneberger is an advocate for fair and affordable housing who has created a new paradigm for post-disaster rebuilding. The devastating impact of Hurricane Katrina exposed the failure of federal, state, and local governments to adequately respond to the needs of the poor and of persons with disabilities. Skilled at identifying points of agreement among parties with varying, often opposing, economic interests and political views—such as developers, elected officials, and community members—Henneberger was an architect of a conciliation agreement with the State of Texas for Hurricanes Dolly and Ike post-disaster rebuilding. This agreement transformed the way that Texas and its local governments address affordable housing, community development, and fair housing and inspired new rule-making at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). It has helped to restore equity in disaster assistance for persons with disabilities and racial and ethnic minorities; expanded low-income residents’ involvement in disaster rebuilding; and served as a model for the allocation of disaster rebuilding funds in other states. Henneberger has also worked with architects and community development corporations to rebuild housing better and more rapidly after disasters. He organized a competition that challenged architects to design a permanent home that could be quickly delivered and
assembled, cost less than a FEMA trailer, and be both easily expandable and attractive. The first homes were built and occupied in 2009 and improved versions of these homes are currently being constructed. Henneberger has a track record of negotiating seemingly small changes in state and local policies and housing practices that enjoy a broad consensus and significantly improve the supply of affordable housing and access to fair housing. For example, he and colleagues worked with government and private agencies to pool housing data to create an online affordable housing counselor. Widely respected across a broad spectrum of stakeholders, Henneberger is working to define new standards for fair housing protections and affordable housing. John Henneberger received a B.A. (1976) from the University of Texas at Austin. He began his work engaging in and supporting grassroots housing advocacy in 1974 as a volunteer with the Clarksville Neighborhood Center in Austin, Texas, and he co-authored Housing Patterns Study: Segregation and Discrimination in Austin, Texas (1979) for the City of Austin Human Relations Commission. Henneberger led several community development corporations (1979–1988) prior to co-founding the Texas Low Income Housing Information Service in 1988. Along with John’s talk, we will also present the awards for the best student papers this year!
HIGHLIGHTS
SATURDAY AWARDS LUNCHEON
Advocacy, Planning, Land: How Climate Justice Changes Everything
Saturday, October 24, 12:15pm - 2:30pm
Room: Imperial Ballroom, 3rd Floor
KEYNOTE: TOM ANGOTTI
Professor, Urban Affairs and Planning, Hunter College and Graduate Center, City University of New York Director, Hunter College Center for Community Planning & Development (CCPD)
Tom Angotti’s recent book, New York For Sale:
Community Planning Confronts Global Real Estate (MIT Press, 2008) won the Paul Davidoff
Award in 2009 and International Planning History Society Book Prize in 2010. New Village Press recently published Service-Learning in Design and
Planning: At the Boundaries, which he co-edited
with Cheryl Doble and Paula Horrigan. The New
Century of the Metropolis: Enclave Development and Urban Orientalism was published by
Routledge in 2012. His other books include
Metropolis 2000: Planning Poverty and Politics, Housing in Italy and a book of short stories, Accidental Warriors.
Through the CCPD and in collaboration with others, Tom has completed studies on New York City’s PlaNYC2030, Wal-Mart, NYU’s expansion
plan, Fresh Direct, and Atlantic Yards. He has collaborated on many community-based plans and written about community land trusts. He is founder and co-editor of Progressive Planning Magazine, and Participating Editor for the journals Latin American Perspectives and Local Environment. He is a Fellow at the American Academy in Rome and served as Fulbright Specialist in India, Italy and Vietnam. Tom previously served as a senior planner with the City of New York and Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Peru.
At this luncheon, Angotti will address his most recent book, The New Century of the Metropolis.
HIGHLIGHTS
Wednesday, October 21, 1:00pm – 5:30pm
Advanced registration requiredPREPARING FOR THE JOB MARKET WORKSHOP
Room: Arboretum I & II, 2nd FloorACSP developed a “preparing for the job market” workshop geared toward doctoral students who are on the job market, or will be soon. The goal of this workshop is to provide information about the job application and interview process as well as whether and how to negotiate a job offer. This workshop features leading planning faculty from across the country who can offer their perspectives as recent job market candidates and/or members of past or current search committees.
Organizers:
REINA, Vincent [University of Southern California] vincent. reina@gmail.com
WOOD, James [Florida State University] jpw14@my.fsu.edu Faculty Participants
BEN-JOSEPH, Eran [Massachusetts Institute of Technology] ebj@mit.edu
CHAPIN, Tim [Florida State University] tchapin@fsu.edu FESER, Edward [University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign] feser@illinois.edu
KRIZEK, Kevin [University of Colorado Boulder] krizek@colorado.edu
LENS, Michael [University of California Los Angeles] mlens@ucla.edu
ROHE, William [University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill] brohe@unc.edu
SHIH, Mi [Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey] mi.shih@uts.edu.au
SPURLOCK, Danielle [University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill] dspurloc@live.unc.edu
STIFTEL, Bruce [Georgia Institute of Technology] bruce.stiftel@coa.gatech.edu
VOS, Jaap [University of Idaho] jvos@uidaho.edu WHITE, Stacey [University of Kansas] sswhite@ku.edu
Thursday, October 22, 8:00am – 2:30pm
(with a break for lunch 11:30am – 1:00pm)NEW CHAIR’S SCHOOL
RSVP requested
Room: Conference Room, 2nd Floor
The New Chair’s School is aimed at current Department Chairs and Program Administrators, as well as those faculty with interests in learning about the Chair’s position and/or developing their administrative skill set. The New Chair’s School is being delivered by Cheryl Contant and Tim Chapin, each a former Department Chair and longtime administrator.
The curriculum is designed to be interactive and engaging, and will allow participants to discuss the opportunities and challenges faced by their units. The program is designed to enrich your administrative skill set, and expose you to best practices in the areas of program leadership, budgeting, and managing faculty and students. We also will discuss strategies for not just surviving, but thriving during your time as a Chair. Co-Headmaster: CHAPIN, TIM [Florida State University] tchapin@fsu.edu
Co-Headmaster: CONTANT, CHERYL [Advancing Your Strengths Consulting] ckcontant@gmail.com
Topics for the school:
• The Official and Unofficial Roles of the Chair • Herding Cats: Motivating and Working with Faculty • Doing More with Less: Fiscal Management and Resource
Development
• Tips for Promoting Strategic Thinking and Effective Decision Making
HIGHLIGHTS
HIGHLIGHTED SESSIONS
LOCAL HOST SESSION – IMMIGRATION AND
BORDERS: PLANNING FOR DIVERSITY, JUSTICE AND
SUSTAINABILITY
Thursday, October 22, 2:45pm – 4:00pm
Room: Cedar, 4th Floor
The Houston region has grown dramatically over the past 20 years and has become one of the most racially/ethnically diverse city in the US; now every ethnic/racial group is a demographic minority (Emerson et al, 2012). Immigrants, once more, are reshaping many American cities like Houston and it is critical that the planning community re-think the way we understand and/or regulate increasingly diverse communities. This session focus on immigration and border issues both in Houston and also in Texas and California and will generate discussion on current policies
Moderator/Organizer: GIUSTI, Cecilia [Texas A&M University] cgiusti@arch.tamu.edu
Participants:
AUDIRAC, Ivonne [College of Architecture and Planning and Public Affairs, University of Texas-Arlington] audirac@uta.edu WEGMAN, Jacob A. [School of Architecture, University of Texas-Austin] jagw@utexas.edu
MUKHIJA, Vinit [Luskin School of Public Affairs, University of California, Los Angeles] vmukhija@ucla.edu
ADAMS, Kimberly [Housing and Community Development Department, City of Houston]
LOCAL HOST SESSION – HOUSTON: NO ZONING OR
ZONING LITE
Friday, October 23, 8:00am – 9:30am
Room: Arboretum 2, 2nd Floor
Houston is the largest un-zoned city in America, and free-market advocates often attribute Houston’s ongoing prosperity to the lack of zoning. In fact, however, Houston is far from unregulated. The city has a wide variety of development requirements, including parking, setbacks, historic districts, and other regulations that limit and restrict land use. The question of whether zoning should be introduced remains controversial, though the city is now pursuing a general plan as an alternative to zoning. In this session, we can learn what land-use regulation really exists in Houston; and whether the current development code and the proposed general plan really serve the city well. Moderator/Organizer: FULTON, William [Kinder Institute at Rice University]
Participants:
WALSH, Patrick [Planning Director, City of Houston] FESTA, Matthew [Professor, South Texas School of Law] SANDERS, Joshua [Houstonians for Responsible Growth]
LOCAL HOST SESSION – ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF
FALLING OIL PRICES ON HOUSTON
Friday, October 23, 9:45am – 11:15am
Room: Arboretum 3, 2nd Floor
As the world’s energy center, Houston hosts more than 5,000 energy related companies. Oil and gas business has been the major industry in Houston since the early 20th century. The newest oil boom has boosted Texas’ economy for several years. Although Houston has diversified its economy energy still accounts for almost half of its local economy. Recent falling oil prices may lower the economic boom in Houston and many other cities in Texas. In this session, we will discuss the possible economic impacts of lower oil prices on Houston. We will focus on the following questions: What are the sectoral and spatial distributions of the economic impacts of falling oil prices in Houston? What are the most vulnerable socio-economic groups at current situation? Are Houston communities resilient enough? What kinds of policies can improve the economic resilience? Should Houston further diversify its economy in response to the oil bust?
Moderator/Organizer: PAN, Qisheng [Texas Southern University] pan_qs@tsu.edu
Discussant: SEN, Lalita [Texas Southern University] sen_lx@tsu.edu
Presentations in this session:
THE IMPACTS OF CHANGES IN THE OIL AND GAS INDUSTRY ON HOUSTON
PERDUE, Adam W. [Institute for Regional Forecasting, C.T. Bauer College of Business, University of Houston]
aperdue@uh.edu
ECONOMIC RESILIENCE OF HOUSTON NEIGHBORHOODS IN THE OIL BUST
PAN, Qisheng [Texas Southern University] pan_qs@tsu.edu
GEOPOLITICS AND ENERGY MARKETS
BARNES, Joe [James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, Rice University] jbarnes@rice.edu
HIGHLIGHTS
HIGHLIGHTED SESSIONS
LOCAL HOST SESSION – THE IMPACT OF PLANNING
ON CIVIL RIGHTS AND WRONGS
Saturday, October 24, 9:45am – 10:45am
Room: Sandalwood B, 4th Floor
How does planning and the built environment impact, extend, or limit civil rights? Whether discussing environmental justice, affordable housing opportunities, transportation access, or disaster recovery inequities, among others, the Houston area and the state of Texas have experienced adjustments to civil rights and liberties. In this session, we will bring together both scholars and activists to discuss a variety of examples in Texas how civil rights are being enforced. We will evaluate the differences in interpretation of these laws in Texas versus in the United States. Finally, we hope to better understand who is enforcing or ensuring that the intent of the legislation is being met. Moderator: COOPER, John [Texas A&M University] jcooper@arch.tamu.edu
Participants:
MICKELSON, Kim [Texas A&M University, Olson & Olson LLP, and Texas APA President-Elect]
SPURLOCK, Danielle [University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill] dspurloc@live.unc.edu
WHITE, Charles [Texas Southern University Student and Community Advocate]
BIG IDEAS SESSION – POST-FERGUSON PLANNING
AGENDA
Thursday, October 22, 9:45am – 11:15am
Room: Arboretum 1, 2nd Floor
Ferguson, Missouri could have been what the equity planners of the 1960s worked so hard to create: a pathway out of the ghetto and into a community of diversity and opportunity. Instead, Ferguson and the many communities like it would become places bereft of opportunity, where, instead of serving their residents, public institutions would oppress and exploit them. What responsibilities do yesterday’s planners have for creating Ferguson and places like it? And what responsibilities do today’s planners have for fixing them? How, if at all, is Ferguson reshaping America’s urban agenda?
Moderator: LANDIS, John [University of Pennsylvania] jlan@design.upenn.edu
Participants:
THOMAS, June [University of Michigan] thomasju@umich.edu REARDON, Kenneth [The University of Memphis]
kreardon@memphis.edu
MCCLURE, Kirk [University of Kansas] mcclure@ku.edu BATES, Lisa [Portland State University] lkbates@pdx.edu
BIG IDEAS SESSION – KATRINA +10
Friday, October 23, 9:45am – 11:15am
Room: Arboretum 2, 2nd Floor
It has been ten years since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and four years since Superstorm Sandy struck New York and New Jersey. While there has been progress—New Orleans is better fortified against the next Katrina, and HUD’s Rebuild by Design Competition has focused attention on improved resilience planning—most American cities remain largely unprepared for future disasters, or for dealing with their aftermath. This Big Ideas session will explore the preparedness and rebuilding lessons of Hurricane Katrina and what planners can do to make America’s urban areas more resilient in the face of climate change and future disasters.
Moderator: LANDIS, John [University of Pennsylvania] jlan@design.upenn.edu
Participants:
OLSHANSKY, Rob [University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign] robo@illinois.edu
EHRENFEUCHT, Renia [University of New Orleans] rehrenfe@uno.edu
SIEMBIEDA, William [California Polytechnic State Univ. San Luis Obispo] wsiembie@calpoly.edu
PEACOCK, Walter Gillis [Texas A&M University] peacock@tamu.edu
DIVERSITY RETREAT SESSION 2: RECRUITMENT AND
RETENTION OF FACULTY OF COLOR
Friday, October 23, 9:45am – 11:15am
Room: Arboretum 1, 2nd Floor
This session is hosted by the ACSP Committee on Diversity. ACSP member schools are in crisis when it comes to recruitment and tenure of faculty of color. Early in its
beginnings, Planners of Color Interest Group (POCIG) focused on this predicament and in accordance with its strategic plan, recruitment and retention of faculty of color became and remains central to its mission. Accordingly, ACSP understands that recruiting and retaining faculty of color is vital for achieving the aspiration of becoming a more diversified faculty. This retreat session highlights strategies for senior faculty and administrators desiring successful recruitment and retention (tenure) of faculty of color. The session will be led by Dwayne A. Mack, Carter G. Woodson Chair in African American History of Berea College - the primary editor of the book Mentoring
Faculty of Color: Essays on Professional Development and Advancement in Colleges and Universities (McFarland &
Company, Inc., Publishers 2013).
Moderator: MACK, Dwayne A. [Berea College] dwayne_mack@berea.edu
HIGHLIGHTS
HIGHLIGHTED SESSIONS
DIVERSITY RETREAT SESSION 3: WORKING SESSION
ON DIVERSITY
Saturday, October 24, 9:45am – 10:45am
Room: Arboretum 1, 2nd Floor
This session is hosted by the ACSP Committee on Diversity. This interactive working session will pull together the attendees from session 1 & 2 to discuss trends that emerged.
Moderator: SANDOVAL, Gerardo [University of Oregon] gsando@uoregon.edu
Participants:
ZAPATA, Marisa [Portland State University] mazapata@pdx.edu Various members of the ACSP Committee on Diversity
PRESIDENTIAL SESSION/DIVERSITY RETREAT
SESSION 1: PAB TASK FORCE ON DIVERSITY,
DIVERSITY CRITERIA IN PAB, AND DATA ON
STUDENT AND FACULTY DIVERSITY
Friday, October 23, 8:00am – 9:30am
Room: Arboretum 1, 2nd Floor
This session is supported by the ACSP President and is hosted by the ACSP Committee on Diversity. The session will introduce the Diversity Task Force of the PAB and its objectives, present preliminary results of the survey of planning schools conducted by the PAB task force, examine general trends on minority student and faculty demographics, and describe a set of indicators on diversity that has been developed by the Diversity Committee. Presenters from ACSP Committee on Diversity include Hazel Edwards, Catholic University; Ann Forsyth, Harvard University; and Siddhartha Sen, Morgan State University, Chair of the Committee. Presenters from the PAB task force on Diversity include Barry Nocks, Professor Emeritus, Clemson University, Chair, Planning Accreditation Board; Connie P. Ozawa, Portland State University; and Michelle M. Thompson, University of New Orleans.
Participants:
EDWARDS, Hazel [The Catholic University of America] edwardsh@cua.edu
FORSYTH, Ann [Harvard University] aforsyth@gsd.harvard.edu SEN, Siddhartha [Morgan State University]
siddhartha.sen@morgan.edu
NOCKS, Barry [Clemson University] nocks2@clemson.edu OZAWA, Connie [Portland State University] ozawa@pdx.edu THOMPSON, Michelle [University of New Orleans]
mmthomp1@uno.edu
PRESIDENTIAL SESSION 2 – THE NEW CENTURY OF
THE METROPOLIS
Saturday, October 24, 2:45pm – 4:15pm
Room: Arboretum II, 2nd Floor
Tom Angotti, former recipient of the ACSP Davidoff Award, published The New Century of the Metropolis: Urban Enclaves
and Orientalism. Written in clear, precise terms, The New
Century of the Metropolis argues that only when the city is understood as a necessary and beneficial accompaniment to social progress can a progressive, humane approach to urban planning be developed. Tom Angotti is fundamentally optimistic about the future of the metropolis, but questions urban planning’s inability to integrate urban and rural systems, its contribution to the growth of inequality, and increasing enclave development throughout the world. Using the concept of ‹urban orientalism› as a theoretical underpinning of modern urban planning grounded in global inequalities, Angotti confronts this traditional model with new, progressive approaches to community and metropolis.
Moderator: THOMAS, June [University of Michigan] thomasju@umich.edu
Participants:
ANGOTTI, Tom [Hunter College, CUNY] tangotti@hunter.cuny.edu
DOAN, Petra [Florida State University] pdoan@fsu.edu SANDERCOCK, Leonie [University of British Columbia] leonies@mail.ubc.ca
ACSP STUDENT AWARD WINNING PAPER SESSION
Saturday, October 24, 8:00am – 9:30am
Room: Arboretum 2, 2nd Floor
Moderator: ANDREWS, Clinton [Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey] cja1@rutgers.edu
ACSP/IACP Karen Polenske Award
NEGOTIATING GOVERNANCE: CENTRAL-LOCAL GOVERNMENT RELATION IN THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THREE DEVELOPMENT ZONES IN CHINA
SHEN, Qianqi [Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey] qshen@ejb.rutgers.edu
ACSP Barclay Gibbs Jones Award for the Best Dissertation in Planning
STALLED ON THE ROAD TO ADULTHOOD? ANALYZING THE NATURE OF RECENT TRAVEL CHANGES FOR YOUNG ADULTS IN AMERICA, 1995-2009
RALPH, Kelcie [University of California, Los Angeles] kmralph@g.ucla.edu
ACSP/GPEIG Gill-Chin Lim Award for the Best Dissertation on International Planning
MAKING LAND FLY: THE INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF CHINA’S LAND QUOTA MARKETS AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR URBANIZATION, PROPERTY RIGHTS AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL POLITICS
XIAO, Yuan [Massachusetts Institute of Technology] yuanxiao@mit.edu
HIGHLIGHTED SESSIONS
HIGHLIGHTS
ACSP Marcia Ritzdorf Award
BUILDING TOGETHER: TINY HOUSE VILLAGES FOR THE HOMELESS
MINGOYA, Cate [Massachusetts Institute of Technology] mingoyac@gmail.com
GPEIG ROUNDTABLE – CRAFTING THE
DEVELOPMENT CASE
Thursday, October 22, 2:45pm – 4:00pm
Room: Ebony
The case study is a central instrument of knowledge creation and pedagogy in development studies. Yet, it is often unclear what a good “development” case is. We know and celebrate the fact that development cases are varied, but are there some key organizing elements in the narrative of a good case that better allow us to understand and capture complex insights from the ground and convey them in simple but powerful ways to a broader audience? With this roundtable we hope to begin a conversation about how to develop better cases in development studies and learn and teach from them.
POCIG ROUNDTABLE – THE FIT BETWEEN THIS
TOPIC AND PLANNING IS WEAK
Thursday, October 22, 5:45pm – 6:45pm
Room: Arboretum 1, 2nd Floor
Sometimes the fit is weak, sometimes the connection could be stronger. Other times you need to make a more clear case for the relevance, and sometimes the topic just falls outside planning. These are some of the phrases that perpetuate silences in planning teaching, research and formal practice. Unfortunately, for the relevance and utility of planning, these ill-fitting topics are often the ones that cut closest to both people’s everyday lives and the structures shaping cities and regions today. These topics include the impact of the police, security and prison systems on communities of color – and particularly Black communities - activism around truly transformative economic change, planning for immigrant communities, and even just asking about how we might feel and how different communities might feel differently about the places where we live, work and play. In this roundtable, we’ll talk over the silence and share experiences, ideas and questions for teaching these supposedly ill-fitting topics. Planning educators will share vignettes from their own experiences trying to incorporate progressive politics and economics, and race and identity in planning curriculums. We will also share questions and think about some next steps for helping planning improve its fit with the contemporary needs of cities and regions. If you happen to use social media, share your own vignette and questions before, during and after the roundtable #WeakFitACSP.
GPEIG ROUNDTABLE ON DOCTORAL
DEVELOPMENT
Saturday, October 24, 8:00am – 9:30am
Room: Cedar
International development education and research is experiencing an energetic period of deep reflection on directions of study and methods of teaching and research. Through this roundtable, GPEIG is organizing a dedicated time to highlight current themes studied by doctoral students of planning concerned with international development, acknowledging that our doctoral students are the best harbingers of future development work. We invite all doctoral students presenting papers or posters at the ACSP to join us for this discussion about the frontiers of knowledge in development research in an effort to exchange ideas on research interests and the broader process of research and writing.
PAB ROUNDTABLE - PLANNERS: PREPARING FOR
THE NEXT GENERATION
Thursday, October 22, 5:45pm - 6:45pm
Room: Pecan Learning Objectives
1. To identify the emerging issues facing the planning profession and planning education.
2. To ascertain the key skills and competencies planning graduates will need to be successful in the future and how they may differ from the past.
3. To assess how the academy is ensuring currency and relevancy in planning education.
Planning education is consistently challenged by a variety of stakeholders, including higher education, accreditation, the public, and the profession, to ensure currency and relevancy. With the increasing move toward assessment of programs and student learning, how are planning programs making sure they are continually improving and teaching the relevant skills and competencies needed for today and tomorrow’s planning department?
This session explores the knowledge, skills and values students and graduates need to be successful in the future. Panelists will discuss what future employers want and need from entry-level as well as more mature planners, and whether current planning education is meeting that need. Research will be presented regarding the preparation of the next generation of planners and the implications for program development, curriculum and student learning outcomes assessment. Participants
HOCH, Charles J. [University of Illinois at Chicago] chashoch@uic.edu
OZAWA, Connie [Portland State University] ozawac@pdx.edu TAEBEL, Jeffrey M. [Houston-Galveston Area Council] jeff.taebel@h-gac.com
HIGHLIGHTS
HIGHLIGHTED SESSIONS
PAB SITE VISITOR AND PROGRAM ADMINISTRATOR
TRAINING
Friday, October 23, 1:30pm – 5:30pm
Room: Sandalwood B
1:30 – 2:45pm Standards Training
In this interactive session Program Administrators and Site Visitors will conduct assessments of selected accreditation standards. You will learn how to address compliance in the Self-Study Report and participate as a Site Visitor to assess selected standards. Please RSVP to PAB, smerits@ planningaccreditationboard.org, if you plan to attend. 3:00 – 5:30pm Outcomes Assessment Training In this interactive session Program Administrators and Site Visitors will learn how to assess student learning and programmatic outcomes. Please RSVP to PAB, smerits@ planningaccreditationboard.org, if you plan to attend.
PAB WORKSHOP ON PROPOSED CHANGES TO
ACCREDITATION STANDARDS
Saturday, October 24, 8:00am – 9:30am
Room: Arboretum 3
PAB is releasing an amendment to its standards this fall. While the process includes two public comment periods, PAB members will highlight the proposed changes in this session.
HIGHLIGHTS
POSTER SESSION AND COMPETITION
Friday, October 31, 6:30pm - 8:30pm
Room: Second and Third Floor Foyers of the Hyatt
Posters will remain on display after Friday night in the Book Fair until the end of Saturday. Voting for your choice of People’s Choice Poster winner will end on Saturday morning at 10:00am. Voting will take place using the conference app! If you don’t have the app, or don’t know how to use it to vote, ask Nicole Smith at the Conference Registration Desk.
POSTERS TRACK 2
THE CHARACTERISTICS OF
MANUFACTURING IN A MEGA-CITY AND ITS IMPACT ON THE REGIONAL ECONOMY
43/666
JO, Jae-Uk [University of Seoul] wodnrwh@naver.com, presenting author WOO, Myungje [University of Seoul] mwoo@uos.ac.kr, primary author
EMPIRICAL STUDY ON LOCATION FACTORS OF URBAN MANUFACTURING IN SEMI-INDUSTRIAL ZONES OF SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA
56/1122
YUN, Jongjin [University of Seoul] jongjin@uos.ac.kr, presenting author WOO, Myungje [University of Seoul] mwoo@uos.ac.kr, primary author
POSTERS TRACK 3
A SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES INDICATOR CATALOG FOR THE U.S.: A REVIEW OF METHODS AND USEFULNESS
71/111
MOSBAH, Simon [University of Pennsylvania] smosbah@design.upenn. edu, presenting author, primary author BIRCH, Eugenie [University of
Pennsylvania] elbirch@design.upenn.edu LYNCH, Amy [Ohio University]
lyncha@ohio.edu
ARE RESILIENCE STRATEGIES EFFECTIVE FOR RISK PERCEPTION?
83/309 *
JUNG, Juchul [Pusan National University] jcjung@pusan.ac.kr
PARK, Hyungjun [Pusan National University] wing4plan@pusan.ac.kr, presenting author, primary author BAE, Kyungwan [Pusan National University] mwkw77@naver.com JANG, Saewoom [Pusan National University] wkdtodna@naver.com
DEVELOPING SUSTAINABLE RECOVERY ANTI-POLLUTION POLICIES FOR THE CATASTROPHIC POLLUTION IN CHINA’S HUAI RIVER
89/404
ZHU, Dan [University of Florida] zhudan@ufl.edu
FINE PARTICULATE TRENDS AND AIRFLOW INFLUENCES IN CHINESE CITIES
93/440
LIU, Chao [University of Florida] liuchao1020@gmail.com, presenting author, primary author
PENG, Zhongren [University of Florida] zpeng@dcp.ufl.edu
PARTICIPATORY APPROACHES TO URBAN FOOD WASTE MANAGEMENT
118/838
AI, Ning [University of Illinois at Chicago] ain@uic.edu
ZHENG, Junjun [University of Illinois at Chicago] jzheng25@uic.edu
FIRED UP: VULNERABILITY, RESILIENCE, EQUITY, AND FEDERAL WILDLAND FIREFIGHTER SAFETY POLICY IN PERSPECTIVE
126/935
LOBBY, Samuel [University of Kansas] s396l619@ku.edu
USING ECONOMETRIC MODELS TO IDENTIFY THE TIPPING POINTS OF DIFFERENT SEA LEVEL RISE ADAPTATION STRATEGIES
137/1078
GOMAA, Mohammed [University of Florida] gomaa.13@ufl.edu, presenting author, primary author
PENG, Zhongren [University of Florida] zpeng@dcp.ufl.edu
EQUITY AND ADAPTATION PLANNING: DO WE KNOW WHAT WE MEAN?
139/1103
HEIMAN, Kelly [University of Kansas] keheiman@ku.edu, presenting author, primary author
LYLES, Ward [University of Kansas] wardlyles@ku.edu
A STUDY ON THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF LIFTING GREENBELTS: KOREAN CASE
142/1121
SONG, Seul Ki [Pusan National University] ssgc3001@naver.com, presenting author, primary author
BAE, Kyungwan [Pusan National University] mwkw77@naver.com LEE, Dalbyul [Dongeui University] dalbyul25@nate.com
JUNG, Juchul [Pusan National University] jcjung@pusan.ac.kr
A STUDY ON THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF LIFTING GREENBELTS: KOREAN CASE
142/1121
JUNG, Juchul [Pusan National University] jcjung@pusan.ac.kr, presenting author SONG, Seul Ki [Pusan National University] ssgc3001@naver.com, primary author BAE, Kyungwan [Pusan National University] mwkw77@naver.com LEE, Dalbyul [Dongeui University] dalbyul25@nate.com
RESEARCH ON SPATIAL CORRELATION OF THE REGIONAL HAZE POLLUTION AND HEAVY INDUSTRY DISTRIBUTION: BEIJING, TIANJIN, HEBEI OF CHINA AS A CASE
155/1282
QIAN, Liu [Tongji University, Shanghai] hbhslq@qq.com
* An asterisk means a
HIGHLIGHTS
POSTERS TRACK 5
A CURRENT INVENTORY OF VACANT URBAN LAND IN AMERICA
240/485
LEE, Ryun Jung [Texas A&M University] ryunjunglee@gmail.com, presenting author
NEWMAN, Galen [Texas A&M University] gnewman@arch.tamu.edu, primary author
MILLENNIALS IN GENTRIFICATION: CINCINNATI’S OVER-THE-RHINE (OTR) IN THE MILLENNIUM
272/578
KIM, Jongwoong [University of Cincinnati] kim2jw@mail.uc.edu
EXPLORING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY AND NEIGHBORHOOD-SCALE URBAN FORM: LEARNING FROM NEIGHBORHOODS IN THE DFW METROPOLITAN AREA
288/811
SAJJADIEH KHAJOUEI, Ayeh [University of Texas at Arlington]
ayeh.khajouei@mavs.uta.edu
COMMUNITY AND URBAN GREEN SPACES: A CASE STUDY ON HOW PEOPLE FROM CAPETILLO IN RIO PIEDRAS, PUERTO RICO APPROACH AN URBAN FOREST
321/1114
VEGA-FONTANEZ, Hagmel A. [University of Puerto Rico] hagmel.vega@upr.edu, presenting author, primary author
RODRIGUEZ ORTIZ, Natalia [University of Puerto Rico] lalapr7@gmail.com
CATALA, Argenis [University of Puerto Rico] argenis84@live.com
MENDEZ, Roselyn [University of Puerto Rico] roselyn.mendez@gmail.com CASTILLO, Pedro Hansel [University of Puerto Rico] hansel.estudios@gmail.com
URBAN RENEWAL, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY AND LOCATION CHOICE AS THE PRODUCT OF HOUSING DISPLACEMENT: AN EX-ANTE ANALYSIS
339/1330
LOPEZ, Esteban [University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]
lopezoch@illinois.edu, presenting author, primary author
GREENLEE, Andrew [University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]
agreen4@illinois.edu
AN ANALYSIS OF JUSTICE OR ACCESS TO JUSTICE FOR BORROWERS RESULTING FROM LEGISLATIVE CHANGES IN THE RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE FINANCE SYSTEM
341/1354
KINEBREW, Corrine [Jackson State University] ckinebrew@gmail.com
POSTERS TRACK 6
RAPID URBANIZATION AND SPATIAL DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS IN THE MIDDLE EAST: A CASE FROM DOHA, QATAR
348/104
HONG, ChangYu [Portland State University] 503changyu@gmail.com, presenting author
SHANDAS, Vivek [Portland State University] vshandas@pdx.edu, primary author
MAKIDO, Yasuyo [Portland State University] ymakido@pdx.edu
POST-APARTHEID HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS AND SENSE OF COMMUNITY IN JOHANNESBURG
349/161
WILLIAMS, Jennifer [University of Michigan] jwillia@umich.edu
POSTERS TRACK 7
THE IMPACT OF URBAN SPRAWL ON THE DECLINE OF INNER CITY: FOCUSED ON THE CAPITAL REGION OF SOUTH KOREA
427/639
EOM, Hyeun Tae [University Of Seoul] hteom@uos.ac.kr, presenting author, primary author
WOO, Myungje [University of Seoul] mwoo@uos.ac.kr
POSTERS TRACK 8
PROMOTING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AROUND NEIGHBORHOOD OIL WELLS IN SOUTH LOS ANGELES: COMMUNITY ORGANIZING FOR A CO-PRODUCTION MODEL OF CODE ENFORCEMENT AND NUISANCE ABATEMENT
471/346
MORRISON HAWKINS, Breanna [University of Southern California] bnmorris@usc.edu, presenting author IBRAHIM, Nancy [Esperanza Housing Corporation]
nancy@esperanzacommunityhousing.org, primary author
NAVARRO, Sandy [Esperanza Housing Corporation]
sandy@esperanzacommunityhousing.org TIO, Rosaline [University of Southern California] rtio@usc.edu
LEWIS, LaVonna [University of Southern California] llewis@usc.edu
POSTERS TRACK 9
IMPLEMENTING A COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT SENIOR CAPSTONE PROJECT USING AN EQUITABLE LEARNING MODEL
528/692
MOHEBBI, Mehri [University of Cincinnati] mohebbmi@mail.uc.edu, presenting author, primary author
VARADY, David [University of Cincinnati] david.varady@gmail.com
POSTERS TRACK 11
INTEGRATION OF PUBLIC HEALTH IN TRANSPORTATION PLANNING THROUGH KNOWLEDGE SHARING
569/736
LI, Jianling [University of Texas at
Arlington] jjli@uta.edu, presenting author, primary author
CASEY, Colleen [University of Texas at Arlington] colleenc@uta.edu
HIGHLIGHTS
POSTERS TRACK 13
CLIMATE CHANGE AND SPATIAL INEQUALITY OF VULNERABLE LABORS IN KOREA
656/449
LEE, Heonyeong [Korea Environment Institute] leehy@kei.re.kr, presenting author
KIM, Donghyun [Korea Environment Institute] donghyunkim@kei.re.kr
POSTERS TRACK 14
FORECASTING TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS FOR THE REGIONAL PLANNING IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGION
702/186
VO, Tom [Southern California Association of Governments] vo@scag.ca.gov, presenting author, primary author CHENG, Wen [Cal Poly Pomona Civil Engineering Department]
wcheng@csupomona.edu WEN, Frank [Southern California Association of Governments] wen@scag.ca.gov
CHOI, Simon [Southern California Association of Governments] choi@scag.ca.gov
HU, Hsi-Hwa [Southern California Association of Governments] hu@scag.ca.gov
MEASURING AND VISUALIZING ACCESSIBILITY IN NAIROBI
711/268
CAMPBELL, Kayleigh [Columbia University] krc2104@columbia.edu, presenting author, primary author RISING, James [Columbia University] jarising@gmail.com
KLOPP, Jacqueline [Columbia University] jmklopp@gmail.com
OVERTURNING PLANNING MECHANISMS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO SPRAWL: CALIFORNIA’S SWITCH FROM LEVEL OF SERVICE TO VEHICLE MILES TRAVELED IN TRANSPORTATION IMPACT ANALYSIS
794/913
FANG, Kevin [University of California, Davis] kfang@ucdavis.edu
MEASURING TRANSPORTATION INEQUALITY
822/1154
SEHATZADEH, Bahareh [Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey] sehatzadeh@gmail.com
SHARED SPACE AND BICYCLISTS: ANALYSIS OF PATHS TAKEN THROUGH SHARED SPACE INTERSECTIONS IN ENGLAND
837/1274
DUNCAN, Allison [Portland State University] abduncan@pdx.edu
MONITORING GENTRIFICATION IN THE TRANSIT-ORIENTED COMMUNITIES USING PERFORMANCE INDICATOR
843/1324
CHO, John [Southern California Association of Governments] choj@scag.ca.gov, presenting author, primary author
WEN, Frank [Southern California Association of Governments] wen@scag.ca.gov
CHOI, Simon [SCAG] choi@scag.ca.gov
SOCIAL DISPARITIES IN WALKING TO SCHOOL: BUILT ENVIRONMENT AND NEIGHBORHOOD CHARACTERISTICS AROUND ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS IN WASHINGTON, D.C.
680/3
HWANG, Jinuk [Texas A&M University] j.hwang@tamu.edu, presenting author, primary author
JOH, Kenneth [Texas A & M University] kjoh@tamu.edu
WOO, Ayoung [Texas A&M University] awoo@arch.tamu.edu
TRANSIT ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT AND NEIGHBORHOOD CHANGE ALONG THE LIGHT RAIL SYSTEM: THE SOCIAL EQUITY IMPACT OF THE METRO BLUE LINE IN LOS ANGELES
777/859
SUNG, Seyoung [Portland State
University] seyoung@pdx.edu, presenting author, primary author
GIBSON, Karen [Portland State University] gibsonk@pdx.edu
POSTERS TRACK 15
BEYOND CONTEMPORARY SUSTAINABLE URBANISM: URBAN RENEWAL THROUGH MEGASTRUCTURE DEMOLITION
858/191
KIM, Chung Ho [University of Washington] charisut@uw.edu
THE FLÂNEUR, URBANITY AND VISUAL QUALITIES IN URBAN DESIGN: A STUDY OF LISBON, PORTUGAL
863/304
DEL RIO, Vicente [California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo] vdelrion@calpoly.edu
ENHANCING THE SOCIAL CAPITAL OF OPEN SPACE IN ABU DHABI
869/435
AL ALI, Anfal [Masdar Institute of Science and Technology] analali@masdar.ac.ae, presenting author
MAGHELAL, Praveen [Masdar Institute] pmaghelal@masdar.ac.ae