Economic Growth: Can Proven Strategies of Urban Development Be Made New?

Economic Growth: Can Proven Strategies of Urban Development Be Made New?
UIC
Economic Growth: Can Proven Strategies of Urban Development Be Made New?
UIC

Economic Growth: Can Proven Strategies of Urban Development Be Made New?

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The 2012 UIC Urban Forum is an annual gathering of the various and diverse communities who work together in pursuit of enhancing the urban condition. With approximately 80 percent of Americans living in urban areas and producing approximately 85 percent of GDP, cities are the backbone of the nation’s economic vitality and have been challenged by the Great Recession unlike any time in the post-War era.

“Economic Growth: Can proven strategies of urban development be made new?” took place during the afternoon sessions of the 2012 UIC Urban Forum, moderated by Lance Pressl, Senior Policy Fellow at the Institute for Work and the Economy. It features:

- Teresa Córdova, Director, The Great Cities Institute, University of Illinois at Chicago
- The Honorable Karen Freeman-Wilson, Mayor of Gary, Indiana
- Geoffrey Hewings, Professor, Director, Regional Economic Applications Laboratory, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Rachel Weber, Associate Professor of Urban Planning and Policy, Associate Director for Research and Program Development, Great Cities Institute, University of Illinois at Chicago
- Raphael Bostic, Former Assistant Secretary for Policy, Development and Research, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development; Judith and John Bedrosian Chair in Governance and the Public Enterprise, Sol Price School of Public Policy, University of Southern California.


About UIC Urban Forum: This year’s theme, “Metropolitan Resilience in a Time of Economic Turmoil,” features discussions on coping with economic challenges in the Chicago metropolitan region and the other urban regions of the nation, improving government cooperation, collaboration and efficiency, spurring economic growth and development, strengthening social safety nets, and addressing the cities’ infrastructure and pension systems. The 2012 Forum examines the strategies and best practices for improving metropolitan regions in these challenging economic times. Featuring top federal and state officials, mayors and city managers from across the country, academic experts in various areas of urban policy and thought leaders in the non-profit, private and foundation communities, we hope today’s discussions will inspire governments and citizens to work together for an improved future for our cities.

The University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) has hosted an annual Urban Forum since 1995 when the first Forum convened under the auspices of the Great Cities Institute. Called the Winter Forum, it featured scholars, public intellectuals, policy makers and elected officials from the Chicago region and other parts of the country. Between 2005 and 2010, UIC in partnership with the City of Chicago, hosted the Richard J. Daley Urban Forum, which was designed as a collaboration aimed at convening key public, private and non-profit leaders in an academic arena to discuss, analyze and propose pragmatic and innovative solutions that will enhance the lives of city-dwellers around the globe.

The UIC College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs (CUPPA) is the primary internal partner for the Urban Forum. The academic strengths of the College allow the Urban Forum to conduct policy-relevant research, examine possible policy approaches to improve the condition of urban regions, conduct public symposia, engage policy officials and academic experts and provide training to the next generation of urban leaders. Key to this partnership is the way in which CUPPA embraces the space between theoretical and conceptual understandings of urban regions on the one hand, and the daily problems and expectations that confront frontline elected city officials on the other. CUPPA scholars theorize, evaluate and propose solution sets to cities, in dialogue both with the broader intellectual community of UIC and other universities, as well as policy analysts, government and non-profit manager and civic association professionals throughout the Chicago metropolitan region. For more, visit: www.uic.edu/cuppa

For more Forum history, 2012 speaker bios, and to download the 2012 White Papers, visit: uicurbanforum.org.