Democratizing Cleveland is the result of almost fifteen years of research on a topic that has been missing from local works on Cleveland history: the community organizing movement that put neighborhood concerns and neighborhood voices front and center in the setting of public policies in the late 1970s and early 1980s.https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevmembks/1016/thumbnail.jp
With the 2010 census tallied, Cleveland officially hit a 100-year low for population. The community ...
This book examines three sets of neighborhood-based nonprofit community organizations whose constitu...
In recent years, courts and commentators have routinely assumed that the desegregation era caused ...
This monograph was written as part of the Cleveland Heritage Program in 1984 to provide more up-to-d...
Residents of East Cleveland are fi ghting to improve the quality of pubic education and access to vo...
The neighborhood crisis of the 1970s in Cleveland was central to the formation of the community deve...
This book uses the concepts and processes of community-building, philanthropic activity, and city pl...
My project examines Cleveland’s struggle to provide adequate education to the public school district...
African American residents of Cleveland, Ohio made significant contributions to their city’s public ...
The following study examines how development coalitions of Cleveland, Ohio have evolved with the cha...
Prepared for Cleveland Neighborhood Association, 612/522-8167. Sponsored by Neighborhood Planning fo...
In May of 1968 Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes launched an ambitious social welfare program titled “Clev...
This paper examines the effect of poor school quality on neighborhood revitalization efforts in four...
The author’s master’s thesis, written in the mid-1970s as the first preservation efforts were underw...
A retrospective look at open housing efforts in one of the nation\u27s most segregated regions
With the 2010 census tallied, Cleveland officially hit a 100-year low for population. The community ...
This book examines three sets of neighborhood-based nonprofit community organizations whose constitu...
In recent years, courts and commentators have routinely assumed that the desegregation era caused ...
This monograph was written as part of the Cleveland Heritage Program in 1984 to provide more up-to-d...
Residents of East Cleveland are fi ghting to improve the quality of pubic education and access to vo...
The neighborhood crisis of the 1970s in Cleveland was central to the formation of the community deve...
This book uses the concepts and processes of community-building, philanthropic activity, and city pl...
My project examines Cleveland’s struggle to provide adequate education to the public school district...
African American residents of Cleveland, Ohio made significant contributions to their city’s public ...
The following study examines how development coalitions of Cleveland, Ohio have evolved with the cha...
Prepared for Cleveland Neighborhood Association, 612/522-8167. Sponsored by Neighborhood Planning fo...
In May of 1968 Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes launched an ambitious social welfare program titled “Clev...
This paper examines the effect of poor school quality on neighborhood revitalization efforts in four...
The author’s master’s thesis, written in the mid-1970s as the first preservation efforts were underw...
A retrospective look at open housing efforts in one of the nation\u27s most segregated regions
With the 2010 census tallied, Cleveland officially hit a 100-year low for population. The community ...
This book examines three sets of neighborhood-based nonprofit community organizations whose constitu...
In recent years, courts and commentators have routinely assumed that the desegregation era caused ...