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Rebuilding Community after Katrina: Transformative Education the New Orleans Planning Initiative

Rebuilding Community after Katrina: Transformative Education the New Orleans Planning Initiative

Current price: $96.50
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Rebuilding Community after Katrina: Transformative Education the New Orleans Planning Initiative

Barnes and Noble

Rebuilding Community after Katrina: Transformative Education the New Orleans Planning Initiative

Current price: $96.50
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Size: Hardcover

CartBuy Online
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Rebuilding Community after Katrina
chronicles the innovative and ambitious partnership between Cornell University’s City and Regional Planning department and ACORN Housing, an affiliate of what was the nation’s largest low-income community organization. These unlikely allies came together to begin to rebuild devastated neighborhoods in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
The editors and contributors to this volume allow participants’ voices to show how this partnership integrated careful, technical analysis with aggressive community outreach and organizing. With essays by activists, organizers, community members, and academics on the ground,
presents insights on the challenges involved in changing the way politicians and analysts imagined the future of New Orleans’ Ninth Ward.
What emerges from this complex drama are lessons about community planning, organizational relationships, and team building across multi-cultural lines. The accounts presented in
raise important and sensitive questions about the appropriate roles of outsiders in community-based planning processes.
Rebuilding Community after Katrina
chronicles the innovative and ambitious partnership between Cornell University’s City and Regional Planning department and ACORN Housing, an affiliate of what was the nation’s largest low-income community organization. These unlikely allies came together to begin to rebuild devastated neighborhoods in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
The editors and contributors to this volume allow participants’ voices to show how this partnership integrated careful, technical analysis with aggressive community outreach and organizing. With essays by activists, organizers, community members, and academics on the ground,
presents insights on the challenges involved in changing the way politicians and analysts imagined the future of New Orleans’ Ninth Ward.
What emerges from this complex drama are lessons about community planning, organizational relationships, and team building across multi-cultural lines. The accounts presented in
raise important and sensitive questions about the appropriate roles of outsiders in community-based planning processes.

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