Final!Program!(07/12/11):!...
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Transcript of Final!Program!(07/12/11):!...
Photographs of Census activities by the U.S. Census Bureau, Public Information Office. Usage does not imply the U.S. Census Bureau’s endorsement of this conference, the hosting institutions, or the hosts.
Final Program (07/12/11):
Suburbs and the 2010 Census National Conference Co-‐Sponsored by George Mason University
and Hofstra University in Arlington, VA (not Fairfax, VA)
3351 Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA 22201
(Metro station: Virginia Square (orange line))
Founders Hall
Thursday, July 14 – Saturday, July 16, 2011
Thursday, July 14, 2011 8 am – 5pm Registration (hallway outside of Founders Hall Room 111) 8:45 am Welcome from Conference Hosts and Dr. Roger Stough, Vice President of Research and Economic Development, George Mason University (Founders Hall Room 111) 9:00 am Opening Panel I: Accessing Business Data Available in the U.S. Census Bureau’s Research Data Center Network (Founders Hall Room 111) The Employer Universe: The Business Register and the Longitudinal Business Database Javier Miranda [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed) The Economic Censuses and the Annual Survey of Manufactures Shawn Klimek [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed) The Longitudinal Employer-‐Household Dynamics Data Erika McEntarfer [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed)
Photographs of Census activities by the U.S. Census Bureau, Public Information Office. Usage does not imply the U.S. Census Bureau’s endorsement of this conference, the hosting institutions, or the hosts.
10:15 am Coffee and Networking (hallway outside of Founders Hall Room 111) 10:30 am Opening Panel II: Accessing Demographic Data Available in the U.S. Census Bureau’s Research Data Center Network (Founders Hall Room 111) The American Housing Survey Mousumi Sarkar [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed) Historical Demographic Data Recovered From the Unisys Todd Gardner [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed) A Guide to the Proposal Process and Using an RDC T Lynn Riggs [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed)
Noon Lunch and 12:30p Keynote Alan Berube, Senior Fellow and Research Director, Brookings Institute (Founders Hall Room 111) (confirmed) 1:30 pm Session: Suburbs and Public Policy: The Role of Government (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Christopher W. Niedt [Hofstra University] [email protected] Revitalizing Older Suburbs: Public Policy Options for America’s Older Low-‐Capacity Suburbs (15 minutes) Kathryn Wertheim Hexter [Cleveland State University] [email protected] (confirmed) The Value of Suburban Community Infrastructure: An Exploration Using Census Data (15 minutes) Suzanne Dayanim [Temple University] [email protected] (confirmed) Linkages between Constructed Geography and Suburban Social Conflict: A Case Study of Colorado Springs (15 minutes) Julie Minde [George Mason University] [email protected] (confirmed) 3 pm Coffee and Networking (hallway outside of Founders Hall Room 111)
Photographs of Census activities by the U.S. Census Bureau, Public Information Office. Usage does not imply the U.S. Census Bureau’s endorsement of this conference, the hosting institutions, or the hosts.
3:15 pm Session: Nonprofits and Volunteers in the Suburbs (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Bernadette Hanlon [University of Maryland Baltimore County] [email protected] Responses to Suburban Poverty: the Demands, Strategies, and Geography of the Nonprofit Safety Net in LA, Chicago, and DC (15 minutes) Scott Allard [University of Chicago] [email protected] (confirmed) Ben Roth [University of Chicago] [email protected] (confirmed) Who Will Answer the Tones: A Preliminary Study of Cohesion in a Suburban Volunteer Ambulance Corp (15 minutes) Jo Anne Reed [Columbia University] [email protected] (confirmed) Creating the Foundation for a Diverse Community: Living Room Discussion Groups within the Tamarack Triangle (15 minutes) Elgin L. Klugh [City University of New York College] [email protected] (confirmed) Combating Suburban Decline: The Role of Social Capital and CDCs (15 minutes) JoAnna Mitchell-‐Brown [University of Cincinnati] [email protected] (confirmed) 5 pm Walking Tour Ballston (meet in front of Founders’ Hall; wear comfortable shoes; tour begins promptly at 5pm) Friday, July 15, 2011 8 am – 5 pm Registration (hallway outside of Founders Hall Room 111) 8:45 am Session: Suburban Poverty (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Christopher W. Niedt [Hofstra University] [email protected] The Suburbanization of the Poor: The Who and Where of America’s Changing Geography of Poverty (15 minutes) Elizabeth Kneebone [The Brookings Institution] [email protected] (confirmed) Carey Nadeau [The Brookings Institution] [email protected] (confirmed) Concentrated Vulnerability and Precarious Housing: Governance Implications of Suburbanizing Poverty in Fast-‐Growth Metro Areas (15 minutes) Rolf Pendall [The Urban Institute] [email protected] Brett Theodos [The Urban Institute] [email protected] (confirmed) Rebecca Grace [The Urban Institute] [email protected] (confirmed) Kaitlin Franks [The Urban Institute] [email protected] (confirmed) Do the Causes of Poverty Vary by Neighborhood Type (15 minutes) Uday Kandula [Cleveland State University] [email protected] (confirmed) Brian Mikelbank [Cleveland State University] [email protected]
Photographs of Census activities by the U.S. Census Bureau, Public Information Office. Usage does not imply the U.S. Census Bureau’s endorsement of this conference, the hosting institutions, or the hosts.
‘I Stay to Myself’ Strategies of Neighboring among the Suburban Poor (15 minutes) Alexandra K. Murphy [Princeton University] [email protected] (confirmed) 10:15 am Coffee and Networking (hallway outside of Founders Hall Room 111) 10:30 am Session: Suburban Decline – or Not? (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Bernadette Hanlon [University of Maryland Baltimore County] [email protected] ‘Are the Suburbs Really Declining?’ Applying the Brookings County-‐Based Metropolitan Typology to the 2010 Census (15 minutes) Robert Lang [Brookings Mountain West] [email protected] Christina Nicholas [University of Nevada, Las Vegas [email protected] (confirmed) There Goes the (Suburban) Neighborhood: Gentrification in the Inner-‐Ring suburbs of Chicago, 2000-‐ 2010 (15 minutes) Suzanne Lanyi Charles [University of Michigan] [email protected] (confirmed) Are Metropolitan Growth Patterns and Policies Associated with Inner-‐Ring Suburban Decline? Evidence from the Longitudinal Analysis (1980-‐2009) for U.S. Metropolitan Areas (15 minutes) Sugie Lee [Cleveland State University] [email protected] (confirmed) Recent Trends in Diverse and Diversifying Suburban Communities in New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia (15 minutes) Karen Beck Pooley [czbLLC] [email protected] (confirmed) Suburban Places and Political Opinion: Integrating the American Community Survey and the National Suburban Survey (15 minutes) Christopher W. Niedt [Hofstra University] [email protected] (confirmed) Noon Lunch and 12:30p Keynote Dr. Robert Groves, Director, U.S. Bureau of the Census (Founders Hall Room 111) (confirmed)
Photographs of Census activities by the U.S. Census Bureau, Public Information Office. Usage does not imply the U.S. Census Bureau’s endorsement of this conference, the hosting institutions, or the hosts.
1:30 pm Session: Suburban Diversity I (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Christopher W. Niedt [Hofstra University] [email protected] Living Just Enough for the Suburbs? The Landscape of Immigrant Resources in the City and Suburbs of Philadelphia (15 minutes) Alexandra K. Murphy [Princeton University] [email protected] (confirmed) Alejandro Rivas [Princeton University] [email protected] Andrea Panchok-‐Berry [University of Pennsylvania] [email protected] Wonder Bread and Pan de Sal: Filipino Americans in the L.A. Frontier and Destabilizations of the Postwar Suburbanization Narrative (15 minutes) James Zarsadiaz [Northwestern University] [email protected] (confirmed) 2:30 pm Coffee and Networking (hallway outside of Founders Hall Room 111) 3:00 pm Session: Suburban Diversity II (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Bernadette Hanlon [University of Maryland Baltimore County] [email protected] Recent Changes in African American Suburbanization and the Color Line at the Beginning of the Twenty-‐First Century (15 minutes) Frank Harold Wilson [University of Wisconsin-‐Milwaukee] [email protected] (confirmed) Developing a Neighborhood Assessment Tool: Leveraging Local and American Community Survey Data to Target Aging Suburban Neighborhoods for Revitalization (15 minutes) Thomas Ludden [University of North Carolina at Charlotte] [email protected] (confirmed) Barbara John [University of North Carolina at Charlotte] Owen Furuseth [University of North Carolina at Charlotte] [email protected] Racial Migration and the Fastest Growing City in America (15 minutes) Anthony Galvan [University of Texas at Dallas] [email protected] (confirmed) 5 pm Walking Tour Clarendon (meet in front of Founders’ Hall; wear comfortable shoes; tour begins promptly at 5pm)
Photographs of Census activities by the U.S. Census Bureau, Public Information Office. Usage does not imply the U.S. Census Bureau’s endorsement of this conference, the hosting institutions, or the hosts.
Saturday, July 16, 2011 8 a – noon Registration (hallway outside of Founders Hall Room 111) 8:45 am Session: Foreclosure and Vacancies in the Suburbs (Founders Hall Room 322 – video conference room) Moderator: Katrin B. Anacker [George Mason University] [email protected] Responses to Foreclosures and Abandonment in Greater Cleveland’s Inner Suburbs (15 minutes) W. Dennis Keating [Cleveland State University] [email protected] (confirmed) Urban Change and Neighborhood Effects of Mortgage Foreclosures in New York and Los Angeles (15 minutes) Elena Vesselinov [City University of New York] [email protected] (confirmed) Andrew Beveridge [City University of New York] [email protected] Housing Vacancies, Public Opportunities (15 minutes) Kristina Yu [The University of New Mexico] [email protected] (confirmed) 10:15 am Coffee and Networking (hallway outside of Founders Hall Room 111) 10:30 am Session: Housing and Real Estate in the Suburbs (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Christopher W. Niedt [Hofstra University] [email protected] A Tale of Three Neighborhoods: Housing Preferences and Chinese-‐American Home Buying Behavior in Irvine, California (15 minutes) Marti L. Klein [California State University Fullerton] [email protected] (confirmed) Transplanting Suburbs: Implications of Suburban Construction in the Urban Landscape (15 minutes) Nicholas L. Caverly [University of Michigan] [email protected] (confirmed) Shared Concerns: Developer Exactions and Housing (15 minutes) Kristina Yu [The University of New Mexico] [email protected] (confirmed) Noon Lunch and 12:30p Keynote Dr. Nancy Denton, Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Albany, SUNY (Founders Hall Room 111) (confirmed)
Photographs of Census activities by the U.S. Census Bureau, Public Information Office. Usage does not imply the U.S. Census Bureau’s endorsement of this conference, the hosting institutions, or the hosts.
1:30 pm Mini Session: Suburban Definitions and Boomburbs (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Christopher W. Niedt [Hofstra University] [email protected] Which Boomburbs are Still Booming? (15 minutes) Robert Lang [Brookings Mountain West] [email protected] Christina Nicholas [University of Nevada, Las Vegas] [email protected] (confirmed) Defining Urban and Rural in the United States: The Census Bureau and Beyond (15 minutes) Christopher J. Henrie [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed) Identifying Exurban Areas in U.S. Metropolitan Areas (15 minutes) Todd Gardner [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed) Matthew C. Marlay [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed) 2:30 pm Session: Suburban Change and Segregation (Founders Hall Room 111) Moderator: Katrin B. Anacker [George Mason University] [email protected] Transit Access across Segregated Neighborhoods in Portland, OR (15 minutes) Brian McKenzie [U.S. Census Bureau] [email protected] (confirmed) The Push Factors behind Suburban Changes in the DC Metropolitan Region (15 minutes) Carolyn Gallaher [American University] [email protected] (confirmed) Challenges to Suburban Sustainability in the 2010 U.S. Census: A Long Island Case Study Robert Brinkmann [Hofstra University] [email protected] (confirmed) Tomohiko Music Steve Ulloa Population Losses in the Suburbs of Johnstown, Pennsylvania: 2000-‐2010 (15 minutes) William B. Kory [University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown] [email protected] (confirmed) Farewell from the Conference Hosts and Invitation to national conference on sustainable suburbs in November 2012 at Hofstra University This conference is supported by a seed grant of the Faculty Research Funding for Tenure-‐Track and Tenured Faculty program, awarded by the Office of the Provost of George Mason University. The participation of Hofstra University’s attendees was made possible in part by a grant from Cedar Shopping Centers, Inc. a self-‐managed real estate investment trust focused on supermarket-‐anchored shopping centers and drug-‐store anchored convenience centers located predominantly in the Northeast. Conference Team: Katrin B. Anacker, Conference Host, George Mason University, School of Public Policy Lawrence Levy, Conference Host, National Center for Suburban Studies at Hofstra University Christopher Niedt, Conference Co-‐Director, National Center for Suburban Studies at Hofstra University Bernadette Hanlon, Conference Co-‐Director, University of Maryland Baltimore County, CUERE