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The Digest

April 25, 2008

The Column
In the latest Column, Andrew Sum and Don Gillis write that the level of national joblessness for teens is greater than at any time over the past 60 years, and this summer will produce a new record unemployment rate unless we take action now.

Column Archives



Calendar
The latest urban policy and planning events in Greater Boston and beyond.


Staff Picks
CURP Research Associate Chase Billingham reviews Sudhir Alladi Venkatesh's ethnography of the underground economy in the American inner city, Off the Books.


In Print
A Los Angeles Times article details how a ubiquitous American brand was forbidden from the Forbidden City, and a Newsweek columnist longs for the comma – literally and metaphorically.


The Center for Urban and Regional Policy
CURP, founded at Northeastern University in 1999, is a "think and do tank" where faculty, staff, and students pool their expertise, resources, and commitment to address a wide range of issues facing cities, towns, and suburbs with an emphasis on the Greater Boston region.


Tell Us
Looking to make a career change? Find out what the latest job opportunities in urban policy and planning are in the Boston area and beyond. Click here to start your search.



In 2001, a diverse group of residents and business owners in the Fort Point Channel area of Boston filed a petition with the Boston Landmarks Commission to make this corner of Boston into an historic district. Their chief goal in this endeavor was to maintain a sense of "place" in the neighborhood. These local pioneers, a number of whom are professional artists, hoped that many of the dangers facing this unique district-in-the-making, from the construction of towering office buildings to the replacement of affordable housing for families with luxurious condos, could be offset or at least kept in check by establishing strict guidelines for development and by requiring all construction proposals to be put through a rigorous review process.

Spotlight Archives


Barry Bluestone, Dean of the School of Social Science, Urban Affairs and Public Policy and Director of CURP, sees the new School becoming Northeastern’s strongest bridge to the community at large. In staying true to this mission, he is offering up a free education to anyone who wants it. The 21st Century City: Urban Opportunities and Challenges in a Global Context, the first class offered solely under the auspices of the new School, is open to graduate students seeking college credit and any community member who wishes to audit or simply sit in for one or two seminars that seem particularly interesting to them.

This Week Archives

While New York City's density alone makes it an environmentally-efficient place to live, the city has also made impressive steps recently towards improving its greenhouse gas emissions, water quality, waste management, and brownfield rehabilitation. But as the city continues to get bigger and older, it has decided not to allow those achievements to breed complacency, and in late April 2007 Mayor Bloomberg announced the release of PlaNYC 2030, a bold, sweeping new agenda for the future of the city's environment, growth, and infrastructure.

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Readers of the CURP website may also be interested in an array of other informative and highly-trafficked websites that the Center maintains. Those include the homepage of Northeastern University's School of Social Science, Urban Affairs, and Public Policy...the Heart of the City online database, which covers social and environmental issues, places, and organizations in the geographic center of Boston, including parts of Jamaica Plain, Roxbury, Dorchester, Mattapan, and Roslindale...and the homepage of the Economic Development Partnership, a continually-growing resource for city and town administrators interested in strengthening their municipalities' economic development efforts. In addition, visit CURP's Urban Policy Links section to find other organizations who are working in urban areas locally, nationally, and globally. As always, anytime readers feel a website should be added to that section, they should contact CURP Managing Editor Joe Christo at j.christo@neu.edu.

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