This report documents Chicago Aging in Place Workshop which focused on connecting older adults to culture and the arts in Chicago and in other cities across America. Click here to download the report.
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This report documents the Aging in Place Workshop in Kansas City which focused on one of the most critical issues facing older adults—finding affordable and suitable housing options. Click here to download the report.
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This report documents the Arizona Aging in Place Workshop which focused on how nonprofit organizations and older adults can equally benefit from Americans’ desire to find meaningful work opportunities after their primary career. Click here to download the report.
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This first Aging in Place workshop was hosted by Hillsborough County, Florida, a county constantly being challenged to provide important services to the growing older adult population. The Tampa Bay Region is home to some of the most comprehensive Aging in Place strategies in the country—a fitting fact for a large region with one of the nation’s highest percentage of residents over the age of 65. Click here to Download Report
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How can America’s cities and counties prepare to meet the needs of an aging baby boomer population? A Blueprint for Action: Developing a Livable Community for All Ages. Click here to download the report.
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Only 46 percent of American communities have begun planning to address the needs of the exploding population of aging Baby Boomers. The Baby Boom generation - born between 1948 and 1964—is rapidly approaching retirement age. When this trend hits its peak in 2030, the number of people over age 65 in the United States will soar to 71.5 million—twice their number in the year 2000—or one in every five Americans. What ARE communities doing to prepare for this?
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Written by Tom Borrup with Partners for Livable Communities, this book features best practices and technical assistance how-to's on using culture as a fundamental tool for transformative community development. The book is a tool of broad scope covering topics such as: Asset Mapping; Funding and Policy; Effective Partnerships; Assessment and Evaluation. The book follows up on Partners ground-breaking Culture Builds Communities work.
Borrup writes, “In 1993 PLC began an extensive developmental program called Culture Builds Community, which aims to systematically place cultural assets within the portfolio of community development efforts…Nationwide in scope, the program gave rise to a publication, Culture Builds Communities, that inspired this book.”
Published by Fieldstone Alliance, Saint Paul, MN, 2006, 261 pages ($25)
(This Report/Book is only available for purchase. Partners does not have an electronic version available)
Terms:2006, Arts & Culture, Books/Reports For Sale, CBC Report/Publication, Community Building, Community Development, Community Engagement, Cultural Institutions, Culture Builds Communities, Economic Development, Multicultural, Museums, Neighborhood Revitalization, Partners Reports/Publications, Social Capital
This report is a framework for a general understanding of Asian American concerns and opportunities to include them in broader civic dialogue. It is designed for local leaders and civic groups on how they can build their infrastructure and leadership around this issue. Click here to download report.
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Terms:2005, Community Building, Diversity, Heritage, Houston, TX, Immigration, Multicultural, National, Partners Reports/Publications, Social Capital
By the Rand Corporation
The study argues that cultural institutions attempting to grow their audiences are increasingly challenged by changing social and demographic trends, intense competition, and tensions between art-oriented and market-oriented aspects of their missions. The report is available here>
The Creative City Initiative is a multi-year technical assistance and networking program that builds upon Partners’ work with amenity-based economics. Research by MIT’s Lester Thurow states that creativity is the fuel of the information age. It is time to look at the relationship of amenities, creativity, technology and e-commerce to the globally competitive region and its ability of attracting the best and the brightest. This book has tools and resources related to the Creative City program.
Published by Partners for Livable Communities, 2004 ($10) (This Report/Book is only available for purchase. Partners does not have an electronic version available)
An exploration of whether midsize cities should have a league of their own, i.e. are they unique and special and should they have a stronger voice on public plicies in the U.S. and on global business development abroad? The results of a conference of invited researchers and public policy leaders led by Tom Argus of Rochester and Laura Durham of Partners for Livable Communities.
Author: William Fulton, Solimar Research, 16 pages, November 2002. ($5) Or Download the Report for Free here
The Partners story – from the first idea to the latest initiative - is told in this twenty-five year report. Year-by-year summaries of achievements, issues, and opportunities track Partners’ longterm effort to define and develop community livability; and appendices identify trustees, funders, and members.
Author: Partners for Livable Communities, 2001.($10)
(This Report/Book is only available for purchase. Partners does not have an electronic version available)
A publication concluding Partners’ four years of work in 20 cities in the Community Futures Program. This publication is an overview of issues of people, place, leadership, jobs, finance, and regional strategies confronting communities across America.”
Published by Partners for Livable Communities/ McGraw Hill 2000, 200 pages ($25)
(This publication is only available for purchase in print. Partners does not have an electronic version available)
This book was written for a popular audience to learn from Ms. Heath’s 10 years of research for the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Her research shows that arts and culturally based, after-school programs for at-risk youth have the most success in reaching young people and helping them develop skills for productive and successful lives.
Authors: Shirley Brice Heath and Laura Smyth, 1999, 96 pages ($10)
Bulk discounts are available for purchases of 10 or more copies. Contact Partners at (202) 887-5990 with questions.
(This publication is only available for purchase in print. Partners does not have an electronic version available)
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