David Luberoff
David Luberoff is Director of Fellowships and Events at the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies, responsible for public event planning and educational outreach at the Center. He has also been a Lecturer on Sociology at Harvard University, where he developed and co-taught an undergraduate General Education course on “Reinventing (and Reimagining) Boston: The Changing American City” and he served as Senior Project Advisor to the Boston Area Research Initiative at Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. In addition, he was Executive Director of Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston at the Harvard Kennedy School (HKS); Associate Director of HKS’s Taubman Center for State and Local Government; and editor of The Tab, which was the largest group of weekly newspapers in greater Boston. The author of many articles and case studies on the politics of infrastructure and land-use policies, he is the co-author (with Alan Altshuler) of Mega-Projects: The Changing Politics of Urban Public Investment, which was named 2003’s best book on urban politics by the American Political Science Association’s urban section.
By This Author
Our Spring Events Focus on Homelessness, Urban Revitalization, Housing Finance, and Equitable Development
Racialized Recovery: Postforeclosure Pathways in Boston’s Neighborhoods
What We’ve Been Reading (and Listening to) This Year
VIDEO: Innovative and Collaborative Approaches to Solving Housing Affordability
Race, Immigration, and Gentrification in Seattle, 1970-2013
Accessory Dwelling Units: Lessons for Massachusetts from Around the Country
Digitalization and Housing: Framing Paper for “Bringing Digitalization Home: How Can Technology Address Housing Challenges?”
Renters’ Responses to Financial Stress During the Pandemic
Mapping Over Two Decades of Neighborhood Change in the Boston Metropolitan Area
Creating Well-Designed Affordable Housing: Opportunities and Obstacles
Mega-Projects: The Changing Politics of Urban Public Investment
How Have Renters Responded to Financial Stress in the Pandemic?
What We’ve Read, Watched, or Listened To in 2020
Online Fall Events Will Focus on Equitable Development, Homelessness, and Other Key Issues
Using Social Housing to Implement a Progressive Urban Agenda: Lessons from Bogota, Colombia
Our Spring Events Focus on Homelessness, Urban Revitalization, Housing Finance, and Equitable Development