Engaging Place, Engaging Practices: Urban History and Campus-Community Partnerships

Colleges and universities in urban centers have often leveraged their locales to appeal to students while also taking a more active role in addressing local challenges. They embrace civic engagement, support service-learning, tailor courses to local needs, and even provide university-community collaborations such as lab schools and innovation hubs. Engaging Place, Engaging Practices highlights the significant role the academy, in general, and urban history, in particular, can play in fostering these critical connections.

The editors and contributors to this volume address topics ranging from historical injustices and affordable housing and land use to climate change planning and the emergence of digital humanities. These case studies reveal the intricate components of a city's history and how they provide context and promote a sense of cultural belonging.

This timely book appreciates and emphasizes the critical role universities must play as intentional--and humble--partners in addressing the past, present, and future challenges facing cities through democratic community engagement.

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Engaging Place, Engaging Practices: Urban History and Campus-Community Partnerships

Colleges and universities in urban centers have often leveraged their locales to appeal to students while also taking a more active role in addressing local challenges. They embrace civic engagement, support service-learning, tailor courses to local needs, and even provide university-community collaborations such as lab schools and innovation hubs. Engaging Place, Engaging Practices highlights the significant role the academy, in general, and urban history, in particular, can play in fostering these critical connections.

The editors and contributors to this volume address topics ranging from historical injustices and affordable housing and land use to climate change planning and the emergence of digital humanities. These case studies reveal the intricate components of a city's history and how they provide context and promote a sense of cultural belonging.

This timely book appreciates and emphasizes the critical role universities must play as intentional--and humble--partners in addressing the past, present, and future challenges facing cities through democratic community engagement.

27.95 In Stock
Engaging Place, Engaging Practices: Urban History and Campus-Community Partnerships

Engaging Place, Engaging Practices: Urban History and Campus-Community Partnerships

Engaging Place, Engaging Practices: Urban History and Campus-Community Partnerships

Engaging Place, Engaging Practices: Urban History and Campus-Community Partnerships

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Overview

Colleges and universities in urban centers have often leveraged their locales to appeal to students while also taking a more active role in addressing local challenges. They embrace civic engagement, support service-learning, tailor courses to local needs, and even provide university-community collaborations such as lab schools and innovation hubs. Engaging Place, Engaging Practices highlights the significant role the academy, in general, and urban history, in particular, can play in fostering these critical connections.

The editors and contributors to this volume address topics ranging from historical injustices and affordable housing and land use to climate change planning and the emergence of digital humanities. These case studies reveal the intricate components of a city's history and how they provide context and promote a sense of cultural belonging.

This timely book appreciates and emphasizes the critical role universities must play as intentional--and humble--partners in addressing the past, present, and future challenges facing cities through democratic community engagement.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781439920978
Publisher: Temple University Press
Publication date: 12/02/2022
Series: History and the Public
Pages: 215
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Robin F. Bachin is the Assistant Provost for Civic and Community Engagement and Charlton W. Tebeau Associate Professor of History at the University of Miami. She is the author of Building the South Side: Urban Space and Civic Culture in Chicago, 1890-1919 and editor of "Big Bosses" A Working Girl's Memoir of Jazz Age America.
Amy L. Howard is the Senior Administrative Officer for Equity + Community at the University of Richmond and associated faculty in the American Studies program. She is the author of More than Shelter: Community and Activism in San Francisco Public Housing.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction: The Past as Prologue: Engaging Urban Places and Public Purpose in the Twenty-First Century Robin F. Bachin Amy L. Howard 1

1 Historicizing Richmond's Future: UR Downtown and the Geography of Community Engagement Amy L. Howard Alexandra Byrum 12

2 Toward Creating the Democratic, Engaged Urban University: Penn's Partnership with West Philadelphia as an Experiment in Progress Ira Harkavy Rita A. Hodges John L. Puckett Joann Weeks 42

3 Digital Storytelling and University-Based Community Engagement in Cleveland J. Mark Souther 70

4 Mapping Miami: Affordable Housing, Equitable Community Development, and Grassroots Engagement in South Florida Robin F. Bachin 96

5 Engaging Neighborhoods in Climate Change Planning with Public History Andrew Hurley 130

6 Critical Tourism and Embodied Geographies: Touring Southern California with the Bureau of Goods Transport Catherine Gudis 155

Epilogue Robin F. Bachin Amy L. Howard 185

Contributors 191

Index 195

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