Chat with us, powered by LiveChat One of the dominant strategies in downtown development is to draw visitors (and/or residents) into the city. Cities have used a | Wridemy

One of the dominant strategies in downtown development is to draw visitors (and/or residents) into the city. Cities have used a

 

One of the dominant strategies in downtown development is to draw visitors (and/or residents) into the city. Cities have used a predictable playbook: constructing convention centers, stadiums, festival malls, etc. and using financial inducements (usually tax breaks) to draw in business partners. Examples from Memphis include Cook Convention Center, Redbirds/Forum, and Crosstown Concourse. Do you think this strategy has benefitted Memphis and which Memphians have or have not benefitted?  Has it been effective in drawing visitors and/or residents? Why or why not? If you don't live in Memphis, consider some examples of downtown development in your area and apply these questions. Please provide examples and evidence from the readings and films to support your arguments. 

PADM 7224 1

MODULE

Seminar in Urban Problems

PADM 7224

University of Memphis Department of Public &

Nonprofit Administration

Edwards & Imrie (2015) Chapters 5 & 6

3

PADM 7224 2

CHAPTER 5: COMMUNITY PLANNING AND PARTNERSHIP

Edwards & Imrie (2015) The Short Guide to Urban Policy

PADM 7224 3

Community Planning and Partnership

 Renew/improve cities through community engagement

 How do to it?

Note: Reminder that several parts of this book discuss urban policy outside of the U.S. Most of the examples in this chapter focus on community-based urban policy in the United Kingdom (UK).

PADM 7224 4

Community Planning and Partnership Defining Community

 What is community?  Complex term with socially constructed boundaries  Often seen as positive concept – used by policy-

makers to spur change (e.g., “there is a breakdown in our community, so we need to act)

 4 common conceptualizations:  Community as a place/geography (e.g., Memphis)  Community as an interest group (e.g., Black

community)  Community organizations (e.g., nonprofits)  Community as process (e.g., community development)

PADM 7224 5

Community Planning and Partnership Community & the Urban Problem

 ~19th century urbanization was described as antithesis of “community”  Conceptualization of the urban “community” was

different than the rural “community”  Urban policy typically targets “communities” to

encourage citizens to participate in urban regeneration, or create “community”

 Shift in urban policy from social community regeneration (prior late 1970s) to economic community regeneration (post late 1970s)

PADM 7224 6

Community Planning and Partnership Reinvigorating Community in the 1990s

 Communitarianism – idea that collective bonds with those around us are important to prevent social exclusion, which leads to urban decline

 Build social capital – linkages that connect people – to build urban renewal

 Communities should be given the responsibility to drive change

PADM 7224 7

Community Planning and Partnership Putting Community Activation into Practice

 Community-based urban policy changes governance – private (for-profit and non- profit) organizations have more seats at the governing table

 Level of community-involvement can vary substantially from policy to policy – from “add-ons” to “key partners”

 All communities (neighborhoods) do not have the existing expertise, knowledge, or ability to engage in policy-making

PADM 7224 8

Community Planning and Partnership Critiquing Community Involvement in Regeneration

 Unanswered questions –  Is community involvement in policy-making

simply tokenism by government or is it of actual value?

 Is the policy implemented with the level of community involvement intended in the spirit of the policy?

PADM 7224 9

Community Planning and Partnership Critiquing Community Involvement in Regeneration

 Looking for answers –  Who represents the community?  “Community” as conceptualized by policy-makers and

implementers often differs from those living in the community

 Who sets the rules for participation?  Policy-makers (city or broader) often continue to

create the top-down rules for engagement  How is power distributed in community

partnerships?  “Expert” knowledge tends to be prioritized over

“localized” knowledge

PADM 7224 10

Privatization & Entrepreneurial Urban Policy Web Links

 British Library – Community Development and Regeneration  https://www.bl.uk/social-

welfare/collection- items?allportalsubjects=community%20de velopment%20and%20regeneration

PADM 7224 11

CHAPTER 6: CULTURE & THE CREATIVE CITY

Edwards & Imrie (2015) The Short Guide to Urban Policy

PADM 7224 12

Culture & the Creative City

 Key to modern urban policy is promoting the city’s culture and creativity to improve well-being (economic and social)  Festivals, sport facilities and events, “place-

marketing”  General idea – cultural strategies lead to

economic development  Critical question – who benefits from this

policy and what who does the policy attract to the city?

PADM 7224 13

Culture & the Creative City: Origins of Culture-Led Urban Policy & Regen

 Growing trend since late 20th century to market/promote culture to grow the city

 For many it was a part of a “reinventing” process after loss of manufacturing industry – adapting to a post-industrial world

 Challenged traditional urban planning with a shot of innovation

 New “cultural” industries (i.e., the arts) to attract – fashion, design, music, film, etc.

PADM 7224 14

Culture & the Creative City: Origins of Culture-Led Urban Policy & Regen  Florida’s “Creative Class” (2002)  General idea – to thrive cities need to

attract new class of educated professionals who work in post- industrial tech, knowledge, and cultural industries; to attract them cities need to cater to their “bohemian” lifestyle (three “T’s”)

 Highly influential, but controversial  Blamed for (or contributed to) large

influx of gentrification and increasing inequality in the 21st century city

 U.S counties by “creativity index”

PADM 7224 15

Culture & the Creative City: Deploying Culture: Strategies & Practices

 Not one specific “cultural promotion” policy, multiple initiatives and strategies

 Culture defined as art vs. culture defined as society – different policy approaches

 Typical goal is that these policies lead to economic consumption (e.g., coffee shops, shopping/retail, nightlife, etc.) and vibrant public spaces  Typically creates neighborhood pockets

(“cultural quarters” – see figure 6.7, p. 162)  Culture and fads change, is it sustainable?

PADM 7224 16

Culture & the Creative City: Deploying Culture: Strategies & Practices

 Flagship urban development  Revitalizing urban areas with large

construction and architecture projects (such as inner city, waterfront, etc.)

 “…even the most landlocked cities have done their best to find some sort of waterfront” (p. 163)

 Place-marketing (“re-branding”)  Promote distinctive cultural features that set

apart the city, attract investment  Brand decay? Does the image represent all

local identities?

PADM 7224 17

Culture & the Creative City: Deploying Culture: Strategies & Practices

 Cultural Events and Festivals  Large-scale, short-term events that attract

tourism and investment  Also used to increase concept of

“community”, improve social bonds, and reduce social exclusion

 Example – Memphis in May  Example – soccer stadium in Chester, PA  Competitive example – Olympic Games

bidding process

PADM 7224 18

Culture & the Creative City: Debating Culture-led Urban Policy

 What much weight should we put into cultural-led regeneration efforts?  Exists a knowledge gap in actual impact –

both economic and social  Further exploration needed in trickle-down

effects and sustainability of efforts  Multiple different types of strategies (i.e.,

policies) that fall within this “bucket” with multiple different outcomes

PADM 7224 19

Culture & the Creative City: Debating Culture-led Urban Policy

“The evidence shows that community- based participatory cultural projects are likely to be far more beneficial in sustaining urban regeneration, but in the eyes of city marketers and management, such projects are less glamorous and unlikely to project a city onto the world stage.” (p. 170)

PADM 7224 20

Culture & the Creative City: Debating Culture-led Urban Policy

 Whose culture is being promoted?  Tension between successful cultural

marketing (what attracts economic development) and real social inclusion (what brings all people together)

 Not always mutually exclusive, but can be  Political power struggles lie at the center of

this question

PADM 7224 21

Culture & the Creative City: Debating Culture-led Urban Policy

 Does cultural marketing eventually result in “sameness” promotion?  All cities are promoting the same type of

cultural regeneration which “homogenizes urban environments”

 Fast policy transfer – X policy worked in City A so why can’t it work in City B; flawed logic

 Florida’s creative class thesis neglects importance of city context in policymaking and implementation

PADM 7224 22

Culture & the Creative City: Web Links

 Charles Landry (prolific author on creative cities  https://charleslandry.com/about-charles-

landry/biography/

 Urban Studies Special Issue on Culture- led Regeneration  https://journals.sagepub.com/toc/usja/42/

5-6

  • Edwards & Imrie (2015)�Chapters 5 & 6
  • Chapter 5: Community Planning and Partnership
  • Community Planning and Partnership
  • Community Planning and Partnership�Defining Community
  • Community Planning and Partnership�Community & the Urban Problem
  • Community Planning and Partnership�Reinvigorating Community in the 1990s
  • Community Planning and Partnership�Putting Community Activation into Practice
  • Community Planning and Partnership�Critiquing Community Involvement in Regeneration
  • Community Planning and Partnership�Critiquing Community Involvement in Regeneration
  • Privatization & Entrepreneurial Urban Policy Web Links
  • Chapter 6: Culture & the Creative City
  • Culture & the Creative City
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Origins of Culture-Led Urban Policy & Regen
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Origins of Culture-Led Urban Policy & Regen
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Deploying Culture: Strategies & Practices
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Deploying Culture: Strategies & Practices
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Deploying Culture: Strategies & Practices
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Debating Culture-led Urban Policy
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Debating Culture-led Urban Policy
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Debating Culture-led Urban Policy
  • Culture & the Creative City:�Debating Culture-led Urban Policy
  • Culture & the Creative City: �Web Links

,

PADM 7224 1

MODULE

Seminar in Urban Problems

PADM 7224

University of Memphis Department of Public &

Nonprofit Administration

Euchner & McGovern (2003) Chapter 2 – Poverty & the

Divided Metropolis

2

PADM 7224 2

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis

 Poverty – “lack of adequate provisions for the basic necessities for living established by society” to be an active and contributing member of society  “Basic necessities” is debatable – universal

medical care is a constant debate in the U.S.  Absolute standard (what needed to get by)

vs. relative standard (what needed to have fair footing with others)

PADM 7224 3

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis

 Summarized impact of poverty:  "But the effects of poverty ripple out beyond

impoverished households and touch the lives of virtually all urban residents. When poverty rises, many other issues are affected…crime rate goes up…decay and abandonment of housing… strains on the public school system…tax revenues fall…communities that suffer disinvestment and depopulation experience a weakening in the bonds of civil society…class and racial segregation follow, as more affluent people distance themselves from poor communities.“ (p. 35-36)

PADM 7224 4

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis

 Urban policy has traditionally contributed to segregation in the city between the poor and affluent or middle class

 Poverty is everywhere – cities, suburbs, and rural areas; concentrated poverty is most evident in cities

PADM 7224 5

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Measuring Poverty

 Central to the story is Mollie Orshansky, “Miss Poverty”  Poverty line calculation developed in the U.S.

Social Security Administration in 1963  Same measure of poverty is used today

 Criticisms of the poverty line calculation  Doesn’t consider “in-kind” benefits received by

the poor (e.g., Medicaid)  Out of touch with today’s economy –

calculation relies heavily on food costs which are only one-sixth of the typical family budget today

PADM 7224 6

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Measuring Poverty

 Why continue to use a 60-year-old poverty line calculation?  Lack of political support – new calculation

would likely drastically increase the aid needed to be delivered

 New calculation would likely make U.S. income inequality look even worse a global stage

 Easier to track changes when using the same calculation

 Poor neighborhoods have better access to material benefits in modern America (e.g., cell phones) – but typically less social capital than previous generations

PADM 7224 7

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Dimensions of Poverty in the U.S.

The changing geography of US poverty

PADM 7224 8

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Dimensions of Poverty in the U.S.

 Working poor – contributing to the labor market but not earning enough income to raise above the poverty line  Typical sectors/jobs include retail, restaurant

service industry, custodial, maintenance, medical care, many others…

 Disproportionally minority populations  Combat working poverty – growing

support for a Living Wage vs. a minimum wage that doesn’t keep up with costs of living to

PADM 7224 9

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Causes of Poverty

 Identifying factors that contribute to poverty from different levels of analysis  Individual – lack of education, poor access to

jobs, medical conditions, alcohol and drug use  Family/Community – unstable home

environment; lack of parental role models; perpetual “culture of poverty”

 Economy/Society – structure of capitalism inevitably creates inequality and a poverty class; racial discrimination hinders ability of minorities to rise out of poverty

 Government – public policies either enable or hinder ability to rise out of poverty

PADM 7224 10

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: The Evolution of the Welfare State

 Government benefits/entitlements for certain groups/classes originated with pensions for Revolutionary War veterans

 Local governments focused on public assistance for poor in their area to foster sense of “community”

 Industrial Revolution escalated challenges of urbanism, including poverty; state governments began to get involved with public program

PADM 7224 11

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: The Evolution of the Welfare State  Catalyst for federal government involvement

was the 1929 stock market crash, but at a slow pace

 FDR’s New Deal (1933-1939) established multiple social programs to benefit unemployed and poor  “people entered into a kind of social contract with

the government: in return for work or other commitments, they got benefits” (p. 69)

 Social Security Act of 1935 established old-age pension – drastically reduced and prevented elder poverty – and system of unemployment insurance

PADM 7224 12

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: The Evolution of the Welfare State

 Truman (late 40’s, early 50’s) – expanded Social Security, established minimum wage, legislation for public housing, and the GI Bill

 LBJ’s Great Society (1964-68) – landmark legislation that focused on extending access to basic rights for minorities and disadvantaged; reduced poverty  Civil Rights Act, Voting Rights Act, Open

Housing Act  Entitlement programs – food stamps,

Medicare, Medicaid, WIC, Head Start, etc.

PADM 7224 13

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: The Evolution of the Welfare State

 Nixon (1970s) – expanded social welfare safety net  COLA to Social Security; Blind and disabled

assistance at federal level; Job programs (CETA); Affirmative action policies

 Growing support for conservative scholars in the 1970s (including controversial Charles Murray, see AEI and SPLC) who argued against a welfare state and any benefit of such

 Regan (1980s) – “replace the carrot of work incentives with the sticks of work requirements”

PADM 7224 14

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: The Evolution of the Welfare State

 Welfare reform in the 1990s  Bush and Clinton granted state waivers to alter

their AFDC programs (“laboratories of democracy”)

 Tighter eligibility restrictions, shorter timeframes, work requirements, penalties for failure to comply

 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA)  Idea was to shift from dependency to self-reliance  Replaced AFDC with block-grant-based TANF  Shifted power to states to create own welfare

programs

PADM 7224 15

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Evaluating Welfare Reform

 What defines success of welfare reform?  Primary measure used – reduction in families

receiving assistance (caseload declines)  Reform caused sharp decline in caseloads  Have those families really transitioned out of

poverty?  Some studies suggest employment is high for

those who left welfare, yet wages are still below poverty line

 Success depends on one’s interpretation of the goal of reform

 Different outcomes in different states

PADM 7224 16

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Future of Welfare Policy

 States look to each other for innovative reform ideas and best practices (Wisconsin’s W-2) – think policy transfer or policy diffusion

 “… to reduce welfare dependency and poverty over the long run, the emphasis on personal responsibility must be coupled with a broader sense of public obligation” (p. 89)

 Policy suggestions – increase support service for people with minimal skills; reconsider lifetime limits; reconsider limits on education and job-training; reconsider restricted eligibility

 Urban welfare reform requires coupling with economic development

PADM 7224 17

Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Future of Welfare Policy

 What will be the lasting impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on welfare policy?  Center for Budget and Policy Priorities

(CBPP) COVID Hardship Watch  Urban Institute COVID-19 Policies to Protect

People and Communities  World Economic Forum – COVID-19 could

change the welfare state forever  Chicago Tribune – About 6 months in, will

the COVID-19 pandemic change Americans’ views of the social safety net?

  • Euchner & McGovern (2003)�Chapter 2 – Poverty & the Divided Metropolis
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Measuring Poverty
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Measuring Poverty
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Dimensions of Poverty in the U.S.
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: Dimensions of Poverty in the U.S.
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �Causes of Poverty
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �The Evolution of the Welfare State
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �The Evolution of the Welfare State
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �The Evolution of the Welfare State
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �The Evolution of the Welfare State
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �The Evolution of the Welfare State
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �Evaluating Welfare Reform
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �Future of Welfare Policy
  • Poverty & the Divided Metropolis: �Future of Welfare Policy

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