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  1. Sep 2021
    1. By virtue of an institution’s de facto economic, educational, and physical contributions, authors argue that a university is a natural partner in neighborhood (and city) revitalization efforts.

      University perspective - we provide econd, ed, and make infrastructure contributions, thus are a good partner.

    2. For example, the Ohio State University emphasized increased beautification and public safety initiatives, homeownership incen-tive programs, and mixed-use development projects to catalyze new private investment. The University of Cincinnati spurred revitalization by providing funds to and serving on the boards of five neighborhood community develop-ment corporations (CDCs), one for each of its adjacent neighborhoods. This strategy moves the institution into a partnership role with the neighborhood, rather than a leadership role. Several other books, articles, and reports empha-size other approaches universities are taking as urban property owners and real estate developers, economic engines, neighborhood partners, and civic leaders (e.g., Bunnell and Lawson 2006; Guinan, McKinley, and Yi 2013; Martin, Smith, and Phillips 2005; Maurrasse 2001; Mayfield and Lucas 2000; Perry, Wiewel, and Menendez 2009; Sungu-Eryilmaz 2009)

      Various case studies and their weaknesses.

    3. case studies. Cases are mostly written from the university’s perspective, highlight-ing the factors motivating an institution to act and the types of investments and/or programs included in the initiative.

      University investment Case studies written from perspective of Universities.

    4. is “enlightened” self-interest (Sungu-Eryilmaz 2009) has sparked a new ethos of university–community engage-ment, a

      University-self-interest guided by community engagement ethos.

    5. deral call for innovation, funded with grant monies, placed new demands on research universities across the country

      GI Bill following WWII, Urban expansion that fed $ provoked Slum clearance "Urban Reneewal Modern architecture and college green - in cahoots with Philly Planning Commision. " Hegemony and Urban renewal - mistrust.

    6. an important change in the urban anchor institution conversation. It moves beyond the “who” and “how” of university-neighborhood interventions and begins to ask, “what happened?”

      What happened to the neighborhood after UPEN WPI interventions in Alex Penn School.

    7. three major categories of indicators.

      Indicators: demographic trends - pop and race; 2) socioeconomic trends (Pov, media hh income; 3) housing trens (units, vacancy, tenure, values.

    8. This article seeks to move beyond the anecdotal, advancing the conversation with a longitudinal evaluation of neighborhood change during the WPI years.

      What is the longitudinal change in neighborhood characteristics as measures of effective revitalization and how do those demonstrate the effect of WPI investments from UPENN> and how does that differ from perceptions captured in previous qual studies?

    9. two subareas (Figure 1). The first is comprised of the 10 block groups located in the Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander University of Pennsylvania Partnership School catchment area, more commonly referred to as the Penn Alexander School (PAS). These 10 block groups received the full array of WPI interventions, including access to enrollment in the Penn-sponsored neighborhood public school. The second subarea includes the portions of University City outside of the PAS catch-ment, defined as all block groups located in the University City boundary, exclusive of those groups also in the PAS catchment. These block groups received most of the WPI interventions, excluding access to the PAS

      Catchment definition in ACS five-year And Outside the Catchment

    10. five-year estimates from the ACS provide continuity in the socioeconomic indicators.

      five-year ACS at block group level has a wide margin of error. The census blocks and tracts may not accurately reflect the actual catchment area of the school. (approximate)

    11. The University of Pennsylvania (Penn)

      Why UPenn as the point of examination? Previous research: cass on UPenn's WPI 0 West Philadelphia Initiatives. But NON have looked at the neighborhood impacts Etienne - Among most sign qual research - but narrow subset - not comprehensive - no stats or measures of broader NH Change.

    12. ohns Hopkins University is collaborating with a number of philanthropic and government stakeholders to pursue the redevelopment of a severely disinvested neighborhood in East Baltimore. The partners established a separate nonprofit entity, East Baltimore Development, Inc. (EBDI),

      John Hopkins in East Baltimore

    13. For instance, Harvard University is investing in neighborhood revitalization as part of its campus expansion plans in Boston’s Allston neighborhood. In addition to investing in new uni-versity facilities, Harvard is leveraging private development to generate new activity along an underutilized commercial corridor and contributing to neighborhood stabilization through a community benefits agreement. Syracuse University is supporting a multifaceted community revitalization initiative, executed by a separate community-focused nonprofit organization.

      Supporting evidence with examples

    14. They responded with diverse place-based interventions, often designed to stabilize the neighborhood’s conditions, induce improvement, and/or catalyze broad revitalization via private investment.

      Private investment in place by universities done at the institutions' interest to retain and recruit students and professors.

    15. urban universities have a large physical presence within their communities. Their assets include significant amounts of fixed capital—primarily real estate holdings and infrastructure—which tend to make universities less mobile than other corporations

      it's the real estate and other infrastructure that anchors universities to place. and a mission, sometimes.

    16. urban universities spent $136 billion on salaries, goods, and services; employed two million workers, two-thirds of which were in nonfaculty administrative and support positions;

      Illustration of impact across US of urban universities.

    17. 2,000 institutions of higher education are located in central cities,

      The university anchor in central urban core is a thing

    18. As cities strive to develop and sustain a place for themselves in the knowledge economy, urban universities represent critical stakeholders with the capacity to contribute to regional economic development in powerful and groundbreaking ways (Goddard and Vallance 2013).

      Universities - powerful regional stakeholders contribute to regional econ dev.

    1. It draws upon material from a significant number of interviews that the author has conducted with this group in a variety of economic sectors and

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    1. early career researchers on the specific ways that they approached and handled the question of ‘how many qualitative interviews is enough?’
    2. Methods Review we draw on the tacit knowledge of a series of renowned social scientists who come from a range of epistemological and disciplinary positions but who share an expertise in qualitative research.
    1. But that method misses an important resource: the field-worker’s reflec- tions and commentary on issues that emerge during the process.

      MARGINAL NOTES: Pay attention to thoughts that emerge during coding about the informant relationship - what was really being said - quality issues - reservations about questions - new hypotheses, things to pursue later. cross ref. to other data sets - my reactions to remarks. enter into the writup.

    2. a unit of analysis.

      Unit of analysis is dif than quant. It can be a sentence, multiple sentences in a chunk. Any block of data. Caution against over coding.

    3. efinitions of Selected Codes From Table 4.1

      Good example

    4. Illustration of a Poorly Structured List of Codes (excerpt)

      Bad system of coding. Too many. Alphabetical subcodes. too hard to remembers.

    5. Lofland’s (1971) scheme sug- gests that codes in any study can deal with the following sorts of phenomena, graduated from micro to macro levels:

      Lofland's phenomenal graduated theme from micro to macro coding.

    6. able 4.1 (Continued)

      This is a good system of coding.

    7. Whether codes are created and revised early or late is basically less important than whether they have some conceptual and structural order. Codes should relate to one another in coherent, study-im- portant ways; t

      codes should be conceptual and structured.

    8. ome analysts have names for coding procedures later in the study cycle. For example, Lincoln and Guba (1985) talk about these operations: 1. “filling in”: adding codes, reconstructing a coherent scheme as new insights emerge and new ways of looking at the data set emerge 2. “extension”: returning to materials coded earlier and inter- rogating them in a new way, with a new theme, construct, or relationship 3. “bridging”: seeing new or previously not understood rela- tionships within units of a given category (that relationship will itself have a name, and it may call for a new configu- ration of the categories) 4, “surfacing”: identifying new categories

      another approach recognizes iterative coding procedures.

    9. We have opted for thoroughness and explicitness, not just because it suits us, but because vague descriptions are of little prac- tical use to others

      The authors present qual methods in an orderly fashion because vague descriptions aren't much use to anyone.

    10. snowball sample of quali- tative researchers and sent them an informal survey, asking them about methods of qualitative data analysis they had been using, and inviting them to send specific examples, B. The Nature of This Book =» 3 exhibits, and suggestions. Many of the ideas from these 126 colleagues have been included.

      Asked other researchers by informal survey about qual methods of analysis that they use and to send examples.

    11. unequivocal determination of the validity of findings is impossible (Becker, 1958; Bruyn, 1966; Lofland, 1971; Wolcott, 1992). More pro- foundly, for some phenomenologically oriented, inter- pretivist, and constructivist researchers, there is no unam- biguous social reality “out there” to be accounted for, so there is little need to evolve methodological canons to help explicate its laws (see Dreitzel, 1970).

      Constructivist approach -- there is no ONE social reality - it's temporal, fluctuates and relates to other "social actors"

    12. problem of confidence in findings has not gone away.

      concedes there's a problem with confidence in the findings.

    13. atrix and net- work

      Methods have advanced since the critiques took shots at qual. among them matrix, network, and even phenomenology, now with procedures.

    14. methods of analysis are not well formulated.

      Methods are poor - no clear conventions. easy to get to wrong conclusions for science and policy-making.

    15. Seen in traditional terms, the reliability and validity of qualitatively derived findings can be seriously in doubt (Dawson, 1979, 1982; Ginsberg, 1990; Kirk & Miller, 1986; Kvale, 1989a; LeCompte & Goetz, 1982

      Qual findings may not be reliable of valid

    16. et, in the flurry of this activity, we should be mindful of some pervasive issues that have not gone away.

      labor intensive - long duration for data collection, too much data demanding coding of data. researcher bias. etc.

    17. form of words rather than numbers, have always been the staple of some fields in the social sciences, notably anthropology, history, and politi- cal science.

      words are source of data for many fields

    18. How can we draw valid meaning from qualitative data?

      Research question. How to get credible qual analysis.

    1. The argument is, however, probably wrong, since themigration of employees across the American space-econ-omy is slow and sticky. The lag between job creation andin-migration provides room for jobless locals and workinglocals on the bottom rungs of the occupational laddereither to become employed or to move up the occupationalladder. Skills are acquired that then help these locals tocompete more effectively with the slow trickle of new in-migrants (Bartik, ). Spurts of local growth (includingthose caused by incentives) materially benefit locals at theback of the labor queue, in the short term and the longterm. Furthermore, those employed during such growthspurts tend, over time, to move up the occupational ladder,and less skilled and Black workers seem to benefit fromthese growth spurts more than the rest of the population(Bartik, ).

      People get better jobs over time, especially black workers.

    2. subsidizing new investment at a particular place merelymakes that place more attractive to in-migrants (Marston,).

      new investments benefit new migrants seeking jobs. Thus little impact to local jobs base.

    3. There are two broad but related justifica-tions for incentives (Eisinger, ).

      Theoretical support: 2 justifications: 1) new jobs and demand for goods and services 2) Improved tax base and thus better services.

    4. Under the rubric of business incentives, we include bothtax instruments—property tax abatements, tax incrementfinancing, sales tax exemptions and credits, and corporateincome tax exemptions and credits for investment or jobs—and non-tax incentives such as business grants, loans,and loan guarantees. In all cases, the firm, not the workeror work seeker, is the initial recipient of the incentive

      Examples of types of incentive included in their definition.

    5. re they a cost-effective strategy forachieving economic growth?

      fundamental question of the paper.

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    1. y. In the Santa Barbara antigrowth movements, for example, much support is provided by professionals from research and electronics firms, as well as branch managers of small "high-technology" corporation

      Example of where anti-growth worked and evidence

    2. s the claim that growth "makes jo
    3. all political movements which attempt to rely upon volunteer labor to supplant political powers institutionalized through a system of vested economic interest, antigrowth movements are probably more likely to succeed in those places where volunteer reform movements have a real- istic constituency-a leisured and sophisticated middle class with a tradi- tion of broad-based activism, free from an entrenched

      Anti-growth requires vounteer refomers - middle class activists - not tied to the growth machine interests.

    4. ocalities grow in population not simply as a function of migration but also because of the fecundity of the existing population. Some means are obvi- ously needed to provide jobs and housing to accommodate such growth- either in the immediate area or at some distant lo

      birth rates create growth. creating environmentla and budgetary stresses.

    5. reas. In fact, the tendency is for rapid growth to be associated with higher rates of unemployment (for general documentation, see Follett 1976; Appelbaum 1976; Hadden and Borgatta 1965, p. 108; Samuelson 1942; Sierra Club of San Diego 1973).

      growth creates unemployment

    6. s, growth benefits only a small proportion of local residents. Growth almost always brings with it the obvious problems of increased air and water pollution, traffic congestion, and overtaxing of natural a

      Growth has costs the affect many but benefit few.

    7. 49).4 In- creased utility and government costs caused by new development should be borne (and they usually are-see, e.g., Ann Arbor City Planning De- partment [1972]) by the public at large, rather than by those responsible for the "excess" demand on the urban infrast

      The public pays for these costs of extending land use.

    8. es; decisions made by private corporations also have major impac

      Private entities also seek to maximize use. And use gvt. as a tool to maximize use of land by reducing costs (through incentives).

    9. g way: an at- tempt is made to use government to gain those resources which will enhance the growth potential of the area unit in ques

      Gvts are interested in land use that enhances growth potential.

    10. is, each landowner (or person who otherwise has some interest in the prospective use of a given piece of land) has in mind a certain future for that parcel which is linked somehow with his or her own well-bein

      Land and rational self-interst regarding its use.

    11. economic essence of virtually any given locality, in the present Amer- ican context, is growth. I further argue that the desire for growth provides the key operative motivation toward consensus for members of politically mobilized local elites, however split they might be on other issues, and that a common interest in growth is the overriding commonality among important people in a given locale-at least insofar as they have any important local goals at all. Further, this growth imperative is the most important constraint upon available options for local initiative in social and economic reform. It is thus that I argue that the very essence of a locality is its operation as a growth ma

      the Growth ideology constrains community centered initiatives that might otherwise provide social and economic reforms.

    12. hat land, the basic stuff of place, is a market commodity providing wealth and power, and that some very important people conse- quently take a keen interest

      Land is a market commodity that builds wealth and power.

    13. of place quite apart from a crucial dimension of social structure:

      Place is separated from social structure.

    14. A city and, more generally, any locality, is conceived as the areal expression of the interests of some land-base

      elites make decisions about city land.

    1. l limits to growthin favor of an optimistic, pro-growth narrative

      the 3 e's don't consider limits to growth.

    2. ncorporates community and environmentalconcerns along with economic one

      Main point is that High Line fails because it didn't include community considerations.

    3. most resolute and avant-garde municipal socialists will find themselves in the end, playingthe capitalists game and performing as agents of discipline for the very processes they aretrying to resist’’ (Harvey, 1989: 5). Given such conditions, the participation of non-profitssuch as the FHL in the creation and governance of public space goes hand in hand withincreasing pressure to follow the rules dictated by the growth machine. Its efforts form aprotective layer that abets and legitimates the city’s neoliberal sustainable growth agenda(Mayer, 2007)

      LU projects like High Line promote the growth machine...

    4. hat particular sustainability fixes alwaysresult in winners and losers (Marcuse, 1998).

      Supports argument by qoting Marcuse.

    5. Indeed, the worldwide proliferation of a host of new urbansustainability strategies such as smart growth, New Urbanism, Transit-OrientedDevelopment and LU, is taking place in tandem with state sponsored, marketfundamentalist discourses (Gibbs et al., 2013)

      These are all pro-growth strategies, according to the author,.

    6. articipant observation and 30 interviews conducted over three yearsfrom 2011 until 2014 on and around the High Line with visitors, FHL staff and volunteersand local business owners.

      Qualitative

    7. contradictions of market driven sustainability projectsin a climate of neoliberal urbanization.

      Critical urban neoliberal sustainablity literature lense.

    8. Cranz and Boland refer to as a ‘‘sustainable park’’ (Cranz and Boland, 2004)

      Sustainability of parks .

    9. principles ofLandscape Urbanism

      Theoretical underpinning

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    1. Bargar and Duncan (1982) note that research is a process “that. religiously uses logical analysis as a critical tool in the refinement of ideas, but which often begins at a very different place, where imagery, metaphor and. analogy, intuitive hunches, kinesthetic feeling states, and even dreams and. dream-like states are prepotent”

      Logical analaysis is the tool that allows for the refinement of ideas. but begins with hunches, feelings, dreams.

    2. he role of intuition-in- this phase of the research process cannot be underestimated. Studies of eminent scientists reveal the central role of creative - insight—intuition—in their thought processes (Hoffman, 1972; Libby, 1922; — Mooney, 1951).

      Intuition as research process congeals.

    3. This complex process of conceptualizing, framing, and focusing a study is depicted in Figure 2.5.

      The process of conceiving, framing and focusing a study.

    4. Figure 2.4 illustrates this funnel metaphor, drawing from the study by Benbow (1994) about the development of commitment to social action. The | large end of the funnel represents the general conceptual f focus—the issue of social activism and its rolein: ameliorating oppressive ‘ctreumiStances. Midway down the funnel, the focus narrows to a concern with individuals who have demonstrated and lived an intense commitment to social causes. An alternative ’ choice at this point would have been to focus on social movements as group | phenomena rather than on individuals whose lived experiences embody social consciousness, The small en end d of t the conceptual funnel focuses even ‘more closel ely ona research q question (or set of questions) about how life ex experiences helped shape and develop a lifelong, intensive commitment to social activism.

      How the research question develops.

    5. e cycle of inquiry

      The Cycle of Inquiry - the relationship between theory practice, research question, and personal experience

    6. Building the Conceptual Framework: LL ‘Tops, Purpose ant Significance ——

      Framing this research in larger theoretical, policy, social context.

    7. Researcher Competence

      Outlines important considerations for the first dissertation... to convey competence. Describes the kinds of evidence that can be used to establish competence of the researcher based on experience - pilots, coursework.

    8. Conceptual Framework

      This is the rationale for the study Why these people Why this setting How does it connect to a larger phenomenon?

    9. ur purpose in this book is to describe the generic process of designing qualitative research; it entails immersion in the everyday life of the setting chosen for study, values and seeks to discover participants’ perspectives on their worlds, views inquiry as an interactive process between the researcher and the participants, is both de- Scriptive and analytic, and relies on people’s words and observable behavior
    10. Design Soundness

      Description of methodological considerations.

    11. o often, policy studies offer findings and recommendations with little sense of how the research led to those recommendations. So

      The need for justifying the approach as written in the research proposal is essential.

    12. Critical ethnography i

      Describes Critical Ethnography.

    13. Feminist theories frame research ranging across issues and disciplines.

      Describes Feminist theories on qual as have an ideological goal of "dismantling" oppressive policy agendas AND their traditions that ignore women.

    14. Introduction

      Read from here to page 29 of the pdf (54) - 3 hours

    15. ualitative Research Genres

      Mentions Jacobs; Atkinson, Delamont and Hammersley; Denzin and Lincoln.

    16. Qualitative researchers are intrigued with the complexity of social interactions as expressed in daily life and with the meanings the participants themselves attribute. to these interactions.

      Qual is good for understanding the way people interact with each other on a daily basis as well as what people think about this interactions (perceptions).

    17. common considerations and procedures for its conduct and certain “habits of mind and heart” (Rossman & Rallis, 1998)

      Despite differences in qual approaches, there are some common considerations and procedures.

    18. e refer to qualitative research and qualita- tive methodology as if they were one agreed-on approach.

      Qual research and qual methods do not have one agreed-on approach.

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    1. While universities are rooted toplace, massive shifts in the healthcare industry are changing the wayhealth services are being delivered,and in some cases forcing urbanhospitals to downsize and relocate.

      Meds may be downsizing - not as stable as universities....

    2. University of Pennsylvania Cen-ter for Community Partnerships

      Penn has a Center for Community Partnerships

    3. Methodology

      where the data came from

    4. renovateaffordable homes and a nearby school,and facilitate homeownership in thearea.

      home renovations and school renovations.

    5. annual donation of $80,000to a neighborhood association to hire afull-time worker who organizes joblessresidents to keep the area clean andsafe.

      Community investment to NH association to hire jobless.

    6. Yale University conducted an eco-nomic assessment of its impact onNew Haven and found that “Yale’sstrength and the health of the City, fiscally and socially, are inextricablylinked” (Economic Impact: Yale andNew Haven, 1993). The study’s find-ings motivated the University to com-mit over $41 million to a variety ofneighborhood revitalization projects in the city.

      University and the success and the social and fiscal health of city are linked.

    7. Between20 to 50 homes are reconstructed

      home construction

    8. The impact of such investments issubstantial. On average, the univer-sity spends over $2 billion a year onpurchasing contracts for goods andservices. Penn’s spending in WestPhiladelphia quadrupled from $10million in 1993 to $42 million in1998. More than three-quarters ofthe university’s construction con-tracts in 1997 went to local busi-nesses that employed city residents.The new retail and commercial activ-ity alone is creating nearly 400 newconstruction jobs and 4,250 long-term jobs. More information can befound at www.upenn.edu

      Economic impact

    9. This survey looked at the 20 largestcities in America and focused on thetop 10 private firms in each (see Table1). T

      Survey of 20 top US cities - 10p 10 private firms.

    10. his study looks at edsand meds as one of those overlooked fixedassets.

      Overall theme - eds and meds often overlooked.

    11. nstitutions of higher learning2 (“eds”) and medical facilities (“meds”) are some of the largestprivate employers in America’s biggest cities. A survey of the top 10 private employers in thelargest 20 U.S. cities found that:

      Higher institutions of learning (Eds) and medical facilities (Meds) are big institutions and employers - often the top ones in a region. Biggies in Baltimore, Detroit, Philadelphia and Washington, DC.

    1. The major strength of the theory of change approach is its inherent common sense. Its major competitive advantage is the inability of other currently available approaches to do the job. We have described the potential benefits of the theory of change approach from the initial planning of a CCI, through the measurement of its outcomes and activities, to the analysis and interpretation of the data. It should generate useful learning over the life span of the initiative and could spawn cross-initiative learning as well. But perhaps its most powerful contribution to the evaluation endeavor is its emphasis on understanding not only whether activities produce effects but how and why, throughout the course of the initiative.

      Evidence to support theory

    2. specifying intermediate outcomes and how they may lead to long-term change can be a politically charged process, especially if those outcomes might imply major resource reallocation or power shifts.

      Shifting power and policy - likely a frequent point for political disagreement and friction.

    3. Robert Granger

      How do we know if community initiated change initiatives have worked??? If a CCI program results in changes that theory predicts, then the theory behind the initiative is correct. Evaluative criteria: 1) Was the change plausible = and did outcomes get reached for community, institutions, and residents. 2) Was the CCI implementation to the desired extent? 3) Was the early, intermediate and long-term change predictably tied to the implementation 4) No other obvious factor could be attributed to such changes?

    4. three measurement issues are emerging that are specific to a theory of change evaluation.

      3 measurement issues - related to evaluating theory of change.

    5. (grid 2 325k),
    6. the field of comprehensive community initiatives (CCIs)

      How to evaluate comprehensive community initiatives and using what methods? 1) Lower expectations: Process documentation - lower expectations of evidence of impact 2) Force a Fit: force initiative into accepted evaluative method 3) Let time tell - wait until CCI is "ready" to be evaluated using common methods. FROM THE BOOK: http://www.aspenroundtable.org/vol2/connell.htm

    7. (grid 1 227k),
    8. surfacing and articulating a theory of change through a collective and collaborative process is as fraught with difficulties as it is full of promise.

      Refutes and provides case study to prove it.

    9. Chen (1990) and Patton (1986) describe a process in which stakeholders and evaluators "co-construct" the initiative's theory so as to maximize its utility for all, as a planning and management tool

      Other theorists say do the design of a project through a co-construction process with stakeholders and evaluators.

    10. theory underlying the intervention

      These theorist note that it's wise to specify the design and goal at the onset of an initiative.

    11. For example, suppose a CCI sets crime reduction in the target neighborhood as one of its longer-term desired outcome

      an example

    12. Clearly, this will not be as powerful as evidence resulting from randomly assigned control and treatment groups,

      random trials better. with control and treatment groups

    13. Although this strategy cannot eliminate all alternative explanations for a particular outcome, it aligns the major actors in the initiative with a standard of evidence that will be convincing to them. Clearly, this will not be as powerful as evidence resulting from randomly assigned control and treatment groups, but, as has been noted elsewhere, random assignment of communities is not a feasible avenue of evaluation for CCIs (Hollister and Hill, 1995).

      Answering critics who might say that a control/treatment type of study would do a better job of identifying alternative explanations for outcomes cannot be captured by Weis' method of outcomes - activities - intervening context (

    14. "theory of change approach"

      A "Theory of change approach" to evaluating community initiatives will have three stages: 1) IDing what should change 2) Set and measure, determine activities and outcomes 3) evaluate, interpret against desired change, and adjust to improve. This draws on typical evaluation process - but CCIs have more elusive nuances because of economic, political and social aspects of communities which have interactions from levels of institutions (govt and NGOs) and community capitals/network, as well as small and collective actors.

    1. The City Sustainable: Three Thoughts on “Green Cities, Growing Cities, Just Cities”

      Planners considering social equity, the economy and nature in sustainable development plans have the opportunity to add other dimensions to the mix.

      Prior to Campbell and the sustainable development paradigm, planning was about improving sanitation and improving determinants of health in communities.

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    1. Cities, Growing Cities”

      Article examines Campbell's seminal article's affect on research paradigms on planning and notes that the planners as well as planning researchers have a long way to go in order to put into balance the triad of social, economic, and ecological concerns in order to achieve true sustainable development.

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    1. eminist research

      Article Focus: Feminist research principles - (3). 1) serve women's liberation by producing knowledge that's useful 2) non-oppressive methods (what's that mean?) 3) contribute to feminist critical perspective that question dominant intellectual traditions... Cannot complete erase the researcher-researched imbalances and contradictions? An abstraction and simplification of data cannot capture all of womens' experiences. Research is questionably valid when researcher becomes part of the change process....

    2. should we do research that is not consciousness raising for the participants? Is such research an oppressive process that of necessity exploits the subject?

      Do the researchers have any responsibility towards safeguarding the wellbeing of their interviewees when such research of difficult topics and discusses can create emotionally challenging or be restimulating for the participants.

    3. e limits were in the restricted possibilities for satisfying work and financial independence facing all the women in our study. The research process was not consciousness raising

      Finding 2

    4. esearch process as consciousness raising or emancipatory. Many of them told us that they experienced the inte

      Finding 1

    5. These problems have to do with how reality is constructed and reconstructed in the process of talking and thinking a

      Reference to Foucault?

    6. the same time such closeness may create certain kinds of blindness in the researcher. One protection we developed against this was in the ongoing process of analysis in the research group. Our analytic discussions, of necessity,

      overcoming the blindness that sensitivity can bring about.

    7. he fact that we, the in- terviewers, were women who have been married, divorced, and had children (one of us had a baby after the study began) increased the validity of our data.

      positioning the researcher within the data and its interpretation - important to account for and explain similarities between researcher and interviewee - as it enhancing the interpretation of the data through sensitivity to phenomena.

    8. he first criterion of adequacy in this approach is that the active voice of the subject should be heard

      is the interpretation adequate? criteria for answering the question of adequacy is outlined. 1) not objectifying 2) theoretical underpinning must allow for interpretation of the social dynamic of observer-subject. 3) The theoretical reworking has to allow for the revelation of underlying social structures.

    9. e expected to work in this way, but if we had understood beforehand how long and difficult the process would become, we might have more consciously and more quickly worked out strategies of analysis.’

      Analytical strategies need to be reworked sometimes due to the realities encountered in the data. See footnote 7 on page 430

    10. At the same time that we were trying to find some fruitful categories in which to group our inter- viewees, we were analysing issues or themes in the in- terviews.

      iterative methodological process.

    11. framework that links women’s oppression to the structure of Western capitalist society.

      Linking women's oppression to capitalistic structured Western society.

      Problematic because strict categories of women who work and women who are housewives aren't stacked in the perceptions of the women studied. not a dychotomy. Thus researchers recategorized qual data.

    12. We were pushed to develop our analysis further by women in the study whom we asked to read the manuscript. They were hesitant about being negative, but were clearly critical.

      Justice - allowing women to read and critque manuscript. Result - researchers - participant design changes - participants asked for sociological interpretation by the researchers. They were looking for insights.

    13. This attempt to make sense out of our information by placing the women into categories of ‘changers’ and ‘non-chang

      Categorization of womens' roles ignored complexities of their situations.

    14. However, we recognized a usually unarticulated tension between friendships and the goal of research.3 The researcher’s goal is always to gather information; thus the danger always exists of manipulating friendships to that end.

      Mentions weakness of the method of the study - manipulation.

    15. is As we pointed out, our commitment to minimizing the power differentials of the relationship in the research was further confounded when it came to the analysis. We found that we had to assume the role of the people with the power to define. The act of look- ing at interviews, summarizing another’s life, and placing it within a context is an act of objectification.

      Weakness of method in upholding feminist ideals - the fundamental objectification of the participants during the analysis. What is objectification.. depersonalization of women, perpetuating historical harms?

    16. er part of the attempt to deal with the subject-object problem was to try to establish some reciprocity by offering, at the end of the first inter- view, to tell the women something about ourselves if we had not done so earlier. Often we didn’t have to offer - it was a request made to us. We always responded as honestly as we could, talking about aspects of our lives that were similar to the things we had been discussing about the experience of the inter- viewee - our marriages, our children, our jobs, our parents. Often this meant also that our relationship was defined as something which existed beyond the limits of the interview situation. We formed friend- ships with many of the women in the study.

      "Subject-object problem" addressed.

    17. Re- jecting the notion that such a separation is possible, Smith (1977) argues that the illusion of this separa- tion can be maintained so long as the knower can be posited as an abstract being and the object can be posited as the ‘other’ who cannot reflect back on and affect the knower.

      Researcher as separate from the object of research is illusory. "The researcher is embedded in a definite social relationship in which there is a power differential in favor of the knower who assumes the power to define the process of the research.

    18. The initial interviews and many of the second in- terviews were taped and transcribed. Later interviews were treated differently - we took notes during the interview and then wrote, immediately afterward, to the b

      Produced texts - verbatim or from memory. No transcription, rather, playback of tapes to listen for major and common themes.

    19. The women were interviewed in their own homes by one of the three of us as investigators. We had in- terviews with 65 women and followed a sub-group of 30 women for four to five years. We tried not to im- pose our ideas about what was important; our inten- tion was to let the concepts, explanations and inter- pretations of those participating in the study become the data we would analyse (Glazer and Strauss, 1973). While we tried to avoid determining what was to be considered in the content of consciousness, we were still aware of our own theoretical ideas. In our continual process of analysis we had to confront discrepancies between our ideas and interpretations and those of the women we interviewed. As the inter- view process proceeded, we decided to bring up cer- tain questions if they did not emerge in the inter- views.

      65 women interviewed in their own home... HOW WERE THEY SELECTED?

    20. At the time of the beginning of the research, very little had been written on middle- aged women; collectively as social scientists we knew next to nothing about the middle years of adult life. We were critical of what little literature existed and were skeptical of widely held assumptions about women of this age.

      Social science literature absent the experience of middle-aged women. Interregate empty next syndrome.

    21. Consciousness is important in a framework that views people as actors who in- tentionally try to affect their own situations.

      Consciousness - people as actors in transforming their own situations. ???? WHO ARE THEORIST OF THIS? Not in the neuroscientific sense. But in the dialectical sense.

    22. We believed that these women, involved in a process of changing life circumstances, would come to see themselves differently as women and would reinter- pret their problems, particularly in a social context that includes a widely-discussed feminist movement.

      Hypothesis: That women who were mom's and wife would see their problems with entering the job market through the lens of and in the social context of the feminist movement. The emergence of a new consciousness in these women undergoing social transformation.

    23. e decided to look at the experiences of women who had been primarily mothers and wives and were attempting to move into the labor market.

      Research sample: Women who were first mother's and wives entering the job market.

    24. We chose repeated, unstructured, individual interviews as well as some group interviews.

      Unstructed interviews of individuals and group interviews. (sampling structure???)

    25. The choice of the prob- lem, together with the critiqu
    26. The following is an account of our research process and the problems we encountered. The feminist critique of social

      Methods section begins here - an account of the research process.

    27. We, the authors of this paper, started a research project in 1976 with the intention of doing a study that might contribute to the liberation of women.

      Understand goals of feminist liberation

    28. right suggests that researchers must take care not to make the research relationship an ex- ploitative one.

      Don't exploit the relationship

    29. emancipatory aim of a women’s sociology derive from its close connections with the con- temporary women’s movement as well as from our particular position as women researchers

      connection of emancipation goal of sociological women's research with political aims of women's movement.

    30. he assumption that the researcher must and can strive to be a neutral observer standing out- side the social realities being studied is made by many who use quantitative and qualitative methods in a natural science model. This assumption is challenged by the feminist critique of social science that documents the male bias of theory and research which has previously been taken as a neutral account of human society. A feminist methodology must, therefore, deal with the issues of objectivity in social science and, in the process, deal also with the issue of the relationship between the researcher and the

      Set up

    31. understandings that may contribute to the goals of liberation. Explo

      Purpose of study is to understand the goals of feminist liberation.

    32. n this analysis, we use a dialectical method, in order to arrive . . . ‘at adequate descrip- tion and analysis of how it actually works. Our methods cannot rest in procedures for deciding among different formalized “opinions” about the world’ (Smith, 1977). Rather, this is a method of ex- ploration and discovery, a way to begin to search for understandings that may contribute to the goals of liberation. E

      Dialectical method? Qual research method aimed at finding the "truth"through interrogation of complex ideas, perspectives or arguments. Not about a hypothesis, rather, an attempt to generate a new understanding. Works with ideas rather than data. Applications: organizational processes, or to understand the philosophy of a movement. (WIKI)

      In this case, it's about understanding the goals of liberation.

    33. Having accepted the above critique of traditional social science, and recognizing that in all social science, women have been peripheral and their lives misrepresented, it is clear that a radical rebeginning is needed in feminist research.

      social science has excluded women, thus a restart on feminist research is needed. Cites thinkers.

    34. ent provided the necessary social basis for legitimation and pol

      Ideologically driven research is okay

    35. nexamined the social processes lying behind the correlations

      Problem w previous gem research is unexamined social processes that create inequities

    1. thus just this, how can research help the p

      How can research help the poor? central Focus. Author examines five participatory research projects (research from the underside) and applies a criteria as to whether or not it is research that helps the poor?

    2. he term 'partic

      Participatory research - make the research useful for the community of focus and involve them in its design and execution.

    3. leader of a community project, sponsored by a voluntary society, on a c

      Community-based research

    4. Dampness and mould growth were also a feature of some houses on the Whiteway and Twerton council

      dampness of homes in council estates in Bath. research for community advocacy. Collective action example.

    5. s. This study originated from the desire of tenants to obtain reliable data which they could use for their cause. They did not carry out the study but they were consulted so that its form would serve their needs. They subsequently made use of the findings to argue their case both to the media and to the local authori

      The study had benefit for the communities.

    6. Damp ho

      Damp rental homes creating health issues in Scotland.

    7. Brighton where the SSD had created o

      Brighton social services patch teams.

    8. s. However, in regard to outcomes, I would add two more bench-marks, namely whether (v) the research enables both researchers and respondents to be more fully aware of the issues being investigated; (vi) the poor use the research findings for their own purpose

      Outcomes criteria.

    9. i) they (the poor) define the issues to be researched; (ii) they contribute to deciding how the topic should be researched; (iii) they participate in collecting the research material; (iv) they interpr

      Criteria for judging if research benefits the vulnerable.

    10. me examples. But h

      How to evaluate research that appreciates power imbalances? Research by and with the social deprived...., Criteria laid forth>

    11. s that such involvement is usually considered as lacking in research objectivity (Oakl

      Criticism about getting too familiar with research subjects based on lack of objectivity.

    12. In the same way, although research may have done something for the poor, it also reflects their unequal position. Firstly, the decisions to undertake studies are made not by the socially deprived but generally by statutory departments, by research units, by people like you and me. Secondly, the processes used to collect material also reinforce notions of superiority and inferiority. Ann Oakley, from a feminist perspective, explains that traditional social research interviewing is based on the following assumption

      Power Imbalances of research.<br> 1)what gets studied is determined in academia. 2) Superior (researcher) - Subordinate (interviewee)

    1. Under the no-harmprinciple, we owe it to our communities to undertake respon-sible scholarship that minimizes the possibilities of harm.

      No harm principle

    2. While itis important to recognize the value of respondents’ time andcontributions to our research, inappropriate levels of remunera-tion can be either coercive or extractive (Paradis, 2000).

      Renumeration of interviewees for time can be extractive.

    3. acknowledge the value of the knowledge thatis held by research communities in the data collection process

      Dealing with power asymmetries.

    4. requested consent to quote brief,anonymized portions of conversations to provide anecdotalcontext.

      consent

    5. acheco-Vega was thus both an insider and an outsider: Hewas fluent in the waste pickers’ language and of the sameethnicity so he could hold fluid conversations with them.

      Inside-outside perspective

    6. ffluence, linguistic and cross-cultural misunderstandings canoccur when conducting foreign research, necessitating a carefuland well-researched process of translation and cultural inter-pretation

      International positionality must take into account these considerations.

    7. ethical frameworkswithin different cultural contexts

      Ethics for doing qualitative studies differ from cultures and national settings.

    8. large investment in resources needed to embedoneself in many different contexts.

      It's expensive to do ethnography - embedded in a community.

    9. remuneration. Weargue that it can be unethical to ask low-income workers tointerrupt their work to participate in research activities withoutcompensating them for their time.

      Pay low-wage people for their time.

    10. en exploitative in terms of the time andenergy requested of low-i

      Design research based on community priorities so as to avoid exploitation and be authentically engaged

    11. doubly engaged ethnography doesso by developing and maintaining authentic rapport with com-munity members and by considering the ways in which vulner-able communities are most susceptible to exploitation.

      Researcher as savor? Or researcher as activist

    12. it is profound, engaged, andimmersive ethnographic research that facilitates a deeper under-standing of how communities work; how social relations arecreated, maintained, restored, and eroded; and how institutionsevolve3 (Billo & Mountz, 2015; McCauley, 2014; Meuleman &Boushel, 2013)

      Immersive ethnography facilitates deeper understanding.

    13. Ethnography as a method2 is suitable for use in doublyengaged social science research because of one important fea-ture: Researchers must embed themselves in the communitiesthey study, and this immersive approach gives scholars a better,clearer, and more in-depth view of the particular policy chal-lenges facing those populations.

      Embedding research - immersive approach - good for descovering policy challenges.

    14. Doubly engaged social science is the underlying epistemo-logical paradigm of several methodological approaches; aresearcher may be able to provide robust analyses and establishmultiple causal pathways for urban poverty using quantitativemethodologies, panel data or cross-sectional large-N studies,and field experiments. Another scholar may opt for qualitativeapproaches including participant observation, focus groups,ethnographic immersion, and one-on-one structured inter-views.

      Various epistemologies and methodological approaches available.

    15. Our approachto fieldwork has been largely driven by Canadian research’sminimal harm principle.1

      Used to do research "minimal harm approach" but that left subjects open to stimatization, not empowerment.

      Why should researchers be concern about empowering the communities they study?? - Because this is the researcher as the activist approach.

    16. Ethnography: A Doubly Engaged SocialScience Research Method Suited toVulnerable Populations?

      Theoretic Context begins here.

    17. ngaged and socially responsiblesocial science method, suggesting that such approaches can be“doubly engaged”

      Double engagement = 1) Engaged in research 2) Social responsibility ---- sensetive and self-reflective

    18. building an analytical frame-work (that we name “doubly-engaged ethnography”

      The gap that the research addresses: Addresses issues of positionality of research, of potential exploitation (suggesting engagement is better); and the way the ethnography represents the communities that are interviewees express.

      Proposes "DOUBLY-ENGAGED" FRAMEWORK

    19. scholar-activists

      Scholar as activist

    20. ethics

      There's an ethics criticism of using ethnography to study vulnerable communities

    21. Ethnography is a powerful qualitative method that helps usunderstand individual and community behaviour.

      Ethnography is qualitative and powerful

    22. how can weengage in ethnographies of vulnerable communities while maintaining a sense of objectivity and protecting our informants?

      Ethnographies of vulnerable communities - and be objective and protect informants

    23. research on the behavioral patterns, socialization strategies, and garbage processing methods of informal waste pickers inArgentina and Mexico

      Argentina and Mexico waste pickers.

  2. May 2021
    1. But if a paradigm is ever to triumph it must gain some first supporters, men who will develop it to the point where hardheaded arguments can be produced and multiplied.

      But if a paradigm is ever to triumph it must gain some first supporters, men who will develop it to the piont where hardheaded arguments can be produced and multiplied.

  3. Mar 2021
    1. Table 3 also displays the results for the property crime rate as a depen-

      EXPLAINS CONTENTS OF TABLE 3

    2. Our analysis strategy is to test whether suburbanization predicts crimerates at the metropolitan level.

      ANALYSIS STRATEGY

    3. This situation is depicted in the top panel of Figure 1. From thisbase, we examine three different possible patterns of suburbanization. Thefirst, shown in the middle panel of Figure 1

      NOTE THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF FIGURES THAT EXPLAIN SOMETHING - DESCRIPTIVE.

    4. The next section reviews the prior literature on the relationship betweencrime and suburbanization, highlighting methodological difficulties encoun-tered in previous research. The section after that discusses a framework forthinking about the relationship between suburbanization and crime thatpoints to an empirical strategy with the potential to isolate the causal effectof suburbanization on crime. Succeeding sections present the data and vari-ables used in our analysis, the regression models employed, the findings ofour analysis, and concluding remarks.

      Roadmap

    5. Our findings suggest that the rapid sub-urbanization of U.S. metropolitan areas does not merely redistribute crimes andvictims but also contributes to higher overall levels of criminal activity.

      FINDINGS. Contributes to overall levels of criminal activity WHERE? (couldn't added crime and victims in numbers be attributed to population growth and expansion?)

    6. metropolitan-level crime rates

      RECOMMENDS CHANGE IN THE UNIT OF ANALYSIS. Unit of analysis should change to Metro-level, rather than central city.

    7. pastresearch has failed to demonstrate this relationship and propose a method thatdoes have the potential to identify this relationship.

      RESEARCH GAP.

    8. whether there is evidence thatsuburbanization leads in a causal way to increases in crime

      RESEARCH QUESTION.

    9. Using themetropolitan area as the unit of analysis

      UNIT OF ANALYSIS

    10. article addresses the potential causal effect of suburbanization on crimeusing data from the U.S. Census Bureau and Uniform Crime Reports

      PURPOSE OF ARTICLE

    11. Crime Reports and census data from 2000

      DATA SET.

    Annotators

  4. Dec 2020
    1. ssumptions implicit within discussing‘trapped’ popula

      Purpose - unpack the hidden assumptions about what it means to be trapped.

    2. we apply a Critical DiscourseAnalysis to the academic literature on the subject to revealsome of the assumptions implicit within discussing‘trapped’ populations.

      Method

    Annotators

  5. Nov 2020
    1. he time and efforts needed to organize detracts from theability of collectives to focus on the goals of new development (and thisis one of the ways in CLTs and MHAs differ from co-ops, that is,expansion is an inherent goal of the former and not of the latter).

      CLT want to expand and MHA don't

    2. ree of long-termdebt servicing and can be maintained much more cheaply.

      long term debt doen't have anything to do with maintenance costs.

    3. for-profit real-estatemarket is unable to produce enough adequate, affordable housing,

      a problem looking to be solved.

    4. ommunity involvemen

      cited benefit of Mutual Housing.

    Annotators