[Uopatos] FW: pppm-student: PPPM Public Lecture: Community Engagement and Revitalization

David Woken dwoken at uoregon.edu
Wed May 3 09:31:05 PDT 2017


Hello everyone,

PPPM is bringing Jeffrey Lowe to speak about social justice and planning in a few weeks, please help spread the word in your departments.

Best,

David

David Woken
Coordinator of Library Graduate Instruction / Coordinador de Instrucción Bibliotecaria Posgrado
History and Latin American Studies Librarian / Bibliotecario para Historia y Estudios Latinoamericanos
University of Oregon Libraries
1299 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403-1299
(541) 346-1883

-----Original Message-----
From: Rachel K Mallinga [mailto:mallinga at uoregon.edu] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2017 7:56 PM
To: David Woken <dwoken at uoregon.edu>; Daniel HoSang <dhosang at uoregon.edu>; Tatiana Bryant <tatianab at uoregon.edu>
Subject: Fwd: pppm-student: PPPM Public Lecture: Community Engagement and Revitalization

Hi Everyone,

The PPPM is having a public lecture on "Community Engagement and Revitalization Through Community Land Trust" by Jeffrey Lowe, a professor from Texas Southern University. Please forward this to any UO listservs you are on. Thank you.

Rachel


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: pppm-student: PPPM Public Lecture: Community Engagement and Revitalization
Date: 2017/05/01 14:44
 From: Richard Margerum <rdm at uoregon.edu>
To: PPPM Student Listserv <pppm-student at lists.uoregon.edu>



Please join us for this public lecture. Feel free to share this with
other who may be interested

--Rich Margerum, PPPM Department Head

PUBLIC LECTURE:

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND REVITALIZATION THROUGH COMMUNITY LAND TRUSTS

Wednesday May 17th

Noon to 1:20pm

Straub Hall 145

DR. JEFFREY S. LOWE, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

Barbara Jordan-Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs

Texas Southern University

Professor Lowe’s research focuses on social justice and racial equity
outcomes within the context of housing and community development
planning processes and policies affecting lower-income groups.  In this
presentation, he will discuss the community land trust (CLT) model and
its implications for the social justice and neighborhood revitalization.
  Lowe explores the rationale for the manner in which CLTs pursue
resident engagement, and the interaction between CLTs and the local
political-economy that influences local quality of life concerns and
public policy.

Dr. Lowe has worked as a consultant and researcher, and provided
national leadership in the planning profession having served as
chairperson of the Planning and the Black Community Division of the
American Planning Association. Professor Lowe is Chair of the Committee
on Diversity for the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning.
Professor Lowe’s research interests focus on social justice and racial
equity outcomes within the context of housing and community development
planning processes and policies affecting lower-income communities of
color.

-- 
Rachel Mallinga
Master in Nonprofit Management Candidate 2017
University of Oregon




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