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Liberalizing cities | From the bottom up

“Market Urbanism” refers to the synthesis of classical liberal economics and ethics (market), with an appreciation of the urban way of life and its benefits to society (urbanism). We advocate for the emergence of bottom up solutions to urban issues, as opposed to ones imposed from the top down.
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Four Warnings For Los Angeles On Measures S

February 18, 2017 By California Palms

Four Warnings For Los Angeles On Measures S

The alternative title for this piece was: "Ballot Box Zoning: Where Needed Housing Goes to Die."Next month, Los Angeles will be voting on Measure S, a proposed 2-year policy that will effectively serve as a moratorium on new construction.  That is, Measure S will require a public vote on any new … [Read more...]

Filed Under: housing, NIMBYism, Policy Tagged With: Los Angeles

Only In California: Twisting an Anti-Exclusionary Law To Rationalize Exclusion

February 8, 2017 By California Palms

Only In California: Twisting an Anti-Exclusionary Law To Rationalize Exclusion

As a Market Urbanism reader, you are hopefully fluent in the problems of exclusionary zoning.  If you're new to the term, there are some good pieces on the topic here and here.  Basically: exclusionary zoning is the use of zoning to price people out of a community.  The classic example is minimum … [Read more...]

Filed Under: housing, NIMBYism, Policy, Uncategorized, zoning

How To Finance A Sanctuary City

January 30, 2017 By Michael Hamilton

How To Finance A Sanctuary City

President Trump has threatened to withhold all federal funds from so-called sanctuary cities--municipal governments that do not enlist their police departments in the president's mass deportation plan. If he makes good on his threat, cities that insist on maintaining their sanctuary status can … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Immigration, Michael Hamilton, Policy, zoning Tagged With: land-use regulation, sanctuary cities, trump

Are “Charter Cities” a Solution?

December 27, 2016 By Sandy Ikeda

Are “Charter Cities” a Solution?

Stanford economist Paul Romer has proposed an intriguing concept: the “charter city.”  A charter city is a newly created city governed by a country other than the one within whose borders it exists. Its residents would remain citizens of the home country.Romer offers Hong Kong as an example when … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Administration, Author: Sandy Ikeda, Policy

Private Neighborhoods And The Transformation Of Local Government

November 29, 2016 By Sandy Ikeda

Private Neighborhoods And The Transformation Of Local Government

Urban Institute Press • 2005 • 494 pages • $32.50 paperbackIn Private Neighborhoods and the Transformation of Local Government, Robert H. Nelson effectively frames the discussion of what minimal government might look like in terms of personal choices based on local knowledge. He looks at the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Author: Sandy Ikeda, housing, planning, Policy, privatization

Collective Action Problems Are Similar For Land Use And Schools

October 30, 2016 By Michael Lewyn

I just read a law review article complaining that some white areas in integrated southern counties were trying to secede from integrated school systems (thus ensuring that the countywide systems become almost all-black while the seceding areas get to have white schools), and it occurred to me that … [Read more...]

Filed Under: housing, Michael Lewyn, Policy, zoning

‘Who better to determine local needs than property owners and concerned citizens themselves?’

October 24, 2016 By Michael Hamilton

‘Who better to determine local needs than property owners and concerned citizens themselves?’

The Cato Institute’s Vanessa Brown Calder is skeptical of the Obama administration’s suggestion that state governments can play a role in liberalizing land-use regulation, a policy area usually dominated by local governments. In an otherwise thoughtful post responding to a variety of proposals, she … [Read more...]

Filed Under: housing, Michael Hamilton, Policy, zoning

NIMBYism As An Argument Against Urbanism

September 26, 2016 By Michael Lewyn

In his new book The Human City, Joel Kotkin tries to use NIMBYism as an argument against urbanism.  He cites numerous examples of NIMBYism in wealthy city neighborhoods, and suggests that these examples rebut "the largely unsupported notion that ever more people want to move 'back to the city'." … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Free-market impostors, housing, NIMBYism, Policy, zoning Tagged With: housing, kotkin, NIMBY, zoning

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