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Rebuilding America's Legacy Cities: New Directions for the Industrial Heartland Book Available
March 30, 2012
Author(s):

 

The accompanying volume for the "Legacy Cities" Assembly is available on Amazon.com. "Rebuilding America's Legacy Cities: New Directions for the Industrial Heartland," features chapters by thirteen national and international leaders and thinkers on urban policy and is a much needed addition to the land use and urban policy world.
 
Individual book chapters are currently available on our web site here.  (Scroll down to downloads)
 
"Legacy cities" offer both resources for and impose burdens on the larger economy. They contain untapped resources of human capital, and billions of dollars in sunk infrastructure investment in roads, transit, sewer and water facilities, parks, and other public facilities. They contain major networks of educational and medical facilities, including such renowned centers as Johns Hopkins, Carnegie-Mellon, and the Cleveland Clinic, while they continue to serve as regional and national centers of culture, art, sport, and entertainment. These assets and resources are of critical importance for a nation struggling with rebuilding its economy and finding its course in the twenty-first century.
 
This volume plays a critical role in building engagement by reshaping the policy conversation about America’s legacy cities at the local, state, and federal levels. It tries to answer a central, salient question: How can change best be brought about? What attitudes and past practices need to be changed and what concrete steps need to be taken in order to put these cities on the path to regeneration as smaller, healthier cities?
The American Assembly

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Colin Kahl
Colin Kahl is an associate professor in the Security Studies Program in the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and is an American Assembly Next Generation Project Fellow. From February 2009 to December 2011, he served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for the Middle East in the Pentagon.  From 2000-2004 and 2006-2007, he was an assistant professor of political science at the University of Minnesota.