How Cities Can Save the World
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Course Description
In our cities, we find the greatest concentrations of the world's great problems--poverty, homelessness, violent crime, and GHG emissions, to name a few. So too, cities present many of the most innovative, impactful solutions to these challenges. In this seminar, we'll look at three great challenges that confront Americans--the dearth of affordable housing, the growing impacts of climate change, and violent crime--in the urban context. We'll explore the legal, fiscal, and political limitations that constrain the terrain of local policymaking, and we will assess best practices among cities for enacting meaningful change within that landscape. Readings and discussion will overwhelmingly focus on U.S. cities, but we will consider a few examples from abroad as well. We will seek to move beyond familiar ideological battles to emphasize outcomes, evidence-based solutions, and analytical rigor. From contemporary academic studies and journals, news articles, case law, and guest speakers, students will gain an appreciation for cities as policy laboratories for pragmatic solutions that often elude binary labelling as "progressive" or "conservative." Students will be better prepared to understand and engage in cities as civic leaders, legal advisors or adversaries, participants in economic transactions, and constituents. This class is limited to 25 students, with an effort made to have students from SLS (15 by lottery) and 10 non-law students by consent of the instructor. Admitted non-law students should forward instructor consent to Grete Howland greteh@stanford.edu for a permission number to enroll in PUBLPOL 165 or Sonia Chan Schan23@stanford.edu to enroll in URBANST 166. Elements used in grading: Class Participation, Written Assignments, and Final Paper. Cross-listed with Public Policy (PUBLPOL 165) and Urban Studies (URBANST 166). NOTE: Due to similar content, students enrolled Confronting Our Housing and Homelessness Crises: Policy, Politics, and the Law (LAW 7128/URBANST 166/URBANST 171) may not enroll in How Cities Can Save the World (LAW 7119/PUBLPOL 165/URBANST 166).
Grading Basis
L02 - Law Honors/Pass/Restricted credit/Fail
Min
3
Max
3
Course Repeatable for Degree Credit?
No
Course Component
Lecture
Enrollment Optional?
No