Summer Reading: Eight Recent Books on Social, Economic, and Political Empowerment
These books offer perspectives on how we can enable a broader range of people to participate in our systems and institutions.
Social innovations that improve the health and resiliency of cities (more)
These books offer perspectives on how we can enable a broader range of people to participate in our systems and institutions.
To really make a difference in tackling inequality, we need coordination on a range of policy issues, from housing and transportation to jobs and education.
A group of museums around the United States is providing poor families with unprecedented access to exhibits and activities.
The spread of affordable housing impact statements offers US cities hope for more equitable development.
Participatory budgeting, which enables citizens to decide how to spend public funds, is building a more empowering model of democracy.
How citizens can push back against urban sprawl and create vibrant, interconnected communities.
A range of strategies and tools can help people in poor neighborhoods make the economic, political, and social connections they need for success.
In Democratic by Design, Gabriel Metcalf looks at how small-scale, self-organized projects that work outside the traditional structures of government and business can scale up to effect widespread social change.
We must align programs and policies to better support the financial strength and security of families of color today, while keeping sight of the long-term benefits for all of creating a truly inclusive economy.
A Stockton, Calif., organization is striving to transform its city through culturally
rooted, healing-centered practices and a pedagogy of love.