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ROBERT W. LAKE Program in Urban Planning and Policy Development tel: 1-848-932-2370 Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy fax: 1-732-932-2363 Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey e-mail: [email protected] 33 Livingston Avenue, Room 363 webpage: Bloustein.rutgers.edu/lake/ New Brunswick, NJ 08901-1982 USA PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University Professor (1995 - ), Associate Professor (1982 - 1995), Assistant Professor (1974 - 1982). Graduate Director and Director of the Doctoral Program (2009 - 2015). Member of the Graduate Faculties, School of Planning and Public Policy and Department of Geography, Rutgers University (1980 - ). Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, UK (2017). Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers University Acting Director (1997 - 98), Associate Director (1998 - 2000). Co-Director, Rutgers Community Outreach Partnership Center (RCOPC), U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (1998 – 2005). Visiting Lecturer, Department of Geography, University of California, Berkeley (1977). Director, Center for Urban Policy Research (CUPR) Press (1989 - 2011). Co-Editor, URBAN GEOGRAPHY, a refereed scholarly journal published eight times a year (1984 - 2004); Plenary Lecture Editor (2004 - 2015); Honorary and Founding Editor (2014 - ). Associate Editor, Journal of the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association (1977 - 1980). Editor, Rutgers University Department of Geography Discussion Papers Series (1978 - 1988). EDUCATION Ph.D., 1981 University of Chicago, Department of Geography Dissertation: “The Social Construction of Space and Place: Community and Change in a Residential Suburb” M.A., 1972 University of Chicago, Department of Geography Thesis: “Race, Status, and Neighborhood: Behavioral Aspects of the Ecology of Racial Residential Change” B.A., 1968 Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio (Geography)

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ROBERT W. LAKE Program in Urban Planning and Policy Development tel: 1-848-932-2370 Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy fax: 1-732-932-2363 Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey e-mail: [email protected] 33 Livingston Avenue, Room 363 webpage: Bloustein.rutgers.edu/lake/ New Brunswick, NJ 08901-1982 USA PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University Professor (1995 - ), Associate Professor (1982 - 1995), Assistant Professor (1974 - 1982). Graduate Director and Director of the Doctoral Program (2009 - 2015). Member of the Graduate Faculties, School of Planning and Public Policy and Department of Geography, Rutgers University (1980 - ). Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, UK (2017). Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers University Acting Director (1997 - 98), Associate Director (1998 - 2000). Co-Director, Rutgers Community Outreach Partnership Center (RCOPC), U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (1998 – 2005). Visiting Lecturer, Department of Geography, University of California, Berkeley (1977). Director, Center for Urban Policy Research (CUPR) Press (1989 - 2011). Co-Editor, URBAN GEOGRAPHY, a refereed scholarly journal published eight times a year (1984 - 2004); Plenary Lecture Editor (2004 - 2015); Honorary and Founding Editor (2014 - ). Associate Editor, Journal of the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association (1977 - 1980). Editor, Rutgers University Department of Geography Discussion Papers Series (1978 - 1988). EDUCATION Ph.D., 1981 University of Chicago, Department of Geography Dissertation: “The Social Construction of Space and Place: Community and Change in a Residential Suburb” M.A., 1972 University of Chicago, Department of Geography Thesis: “Race, Status, and Neighborhood: Behavioral Aspects of the Ecology of Racial Residential Change” B.A., 1968 Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio (Geography)

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EXTERNAL RESEARCH SUPPORT [Principal Investigator] Project Title and Funding Source Period Amount Camden Regional Equity Demonstration Project, MDRC and the (2005-07) $254,257 Ford Foundation (Co-PI with Kathe Newman) Rutgers Community Outreach Partnership Center (RCOPC) New (2002-04) $149,999 Directions, U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (Co-PI with Kathe Newman) University-Community Partnerships in the Baltics: Opportunities (2001) $3,841 and Challenges, U.S. Department of State Evaluation of the Role of EDA in Efforts to Alleviate Domestic (2000-04) $133,500 Distress Since 1965, U.S. Economic Development Administration (Co-PI with Robin Leichenko) American Indian Tribes and Environmental Justice, National Science (2000-01) $7,436 Foundation, Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Award (on behalf of Noriko Ishiyama) Rutgers Community Outreach Partnership Center (RCOPC), (1998-2002) $399,998 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Urban Policy Analysis Project, NJ Office of State Planning, (1998-99) $30,000 NJ Department of Community Affairs Research Workshop: Towards a Comprehensive Geographical (1998-99) $30,799 Approach to Urban Sustainability, National Science Foundation (Co-PI with Susan Hanson) Tax Incentives and Disincentives for Pollution Prevention in (1993-95) $34,848 New Jersey, NJ Department of Environmental Protection Locational Conflict Over Toxic Waste Dumping in International (1991) $3,500 Perspective: Politics, Community and Culture in Local Opposition to Unwanted Facilities, Swedish Information Service Urban Planning and Government Reorganization in Poland, (1990) $84,096 United States Information Agency (Co-PI with Joanna Regulska) Unionism as a Way of Life, National Science Foundation, (1989-92) $7,232 Doctoral Dissertation Research in Geography and Regional Science (on behalf of Leyla Vural)

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Mitigation and Compensation of Community Concerns in Siting (1987-90) $194,674 Hazardous Waste Management Facilities, NSF Industry/University Cooperative Center for Research in Hazardous and Toxic Substances Improving Public Participation in Permitting Hazardous Waste Facilities: (1984-87) $218,485 A National Survey and Case Studies, NSF Industry/University Cooperative Center for Research in Hazardous and Toxic Substances The Impact of Political Systems on Urban Policy: Poland, Sweden and (1986-89) $17,500 the United States, Council for European Studies and the President's Coordinating Council on International Programs (with Joanna Regulska) Institutions and Urban Revitalization, National Science Foundation, (1984-85) $4,084 Doctoral Dissertation Research in Geography and Regional Science (on behalf of David Wilson) New Jersey's Infrastructure Needs: A Case Study, U.S. Congress (1983) $5,000 Joint Economic Committee and the Port Authority of NY and NJ Unmet Black Demand for Suburban Homeownership, (1980-81) $135,709 National Institute of Mental Health Institutional Influences on Black Suburbanization, (1978-80) $186,837 National Institute of Mental Health PUBLICATIONS - Books Robert W. Lake, ed. 1987. Resolving Locational Conflict. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. Robert W. Lake, ed. 1983. Readings in Urban Analysis: Perspectives on Urban Form and Structure. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. Robert Burchell, Patrick Beaton, David Listokin, George Sternlieb, Robert Lake, and Richard Florida. 1983. Mount Laurel II: Challenge and Delivery of Low-Cost Housing. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Center for Urban Policy Research Press. Robert W. Lake. 1981. The New Suburbanites: Race and Housing in the Suburbs. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. Robert W. Lake. 1979. Real Estate Tax Delinquency: Private Disinvestment and Public Response. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.

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PUBLICATIONS – Journal Articles and Book Chapters 2017 Robert W. Lake, “Big Data, urban governance, and the ontological politics of hyper-

individualism.” Big Data and Society, 4,1: 1-10. DOI: 10.1177/2053951716682537. Robert W. Lake, “A humanist perspective on knowledge for planning: Implications for theory,

research, and practice.” Planning Theory and Practice, 18,2: 291-319. DOI: 10.1080/14649357.2017.1297554.

Robert W. Lake, “2016 Urban Geography Plenary Lecture: On poetry, pragmatism, and the

urban possibility of creative democracy.” Urban Geography 38,4: 479-494. DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2016.1272195.

Robert W. Lake, “For creative democracy.” Urban Geography 38,4: 507-511.

DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2016.1272198.

Robert W. Lake, “Planning urban geographies and the contested rationalities of city-making.” Urban Geography, 38,2: 239-242. DOI: 10.1080.02723638.2016.1206715.

2016 Robert W. Lake, “Justice as subject and object of planning.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 40,6: 1206-1221. DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.12442.

Robert W. Lake, “The subordination of urban policy in the time of financialization,” in James

DeFilippis, ed., Urban Policy in the Time of Obama. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 45-64.

2015 Robert W. Lake, “The financialization of urban policy in the age of Obama.” Journal of Urban

Affairs 37: 75-78. 2014 Robert W. Lake, “Methods and moral inquiry.” Urban Geography, 35: 657-668. 2012 Robert W. Lake and Andrew W. Zitcer, “Who says? Authority, voice, and authorship in

narratives of planning research.” Journal of Planning Education and Research 32: 389-399.

Andrew Zitcer and Robert W. Lake, “Love as a planning method.” Planning Theory and Practice, 13: 606-609.

2006 Robert W. Lake, “Re-centering the city,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research

30: 194-197. Kathe Newman and Robert W. Lake, “Democracy, bureaucracy and difference in U.S.

community development politics since 1968,” Progress in Human Geography 30: 44-61. 2005 Robert W. Lake, “Urban crisis redux,” Urban Geography 26: 266-270.

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Robert W. Lake, “The anti-urban angst of urban geography in the 1980s,” in Brian J.L. Berry and James O. Wheeler, eds., Urban Geography in America, 1950-2000: Paradigms and Personalities. NY: Routledge, pp. 279-284.

Robert W. Lake, “The power of culture and the culture of power in urban geography in the

1990s,” in Brian J.L. Berry and James O. Wheeler, eds., Urban Geography in America, 1950-2000: Paradigms and Personalities. NY: Routledge, pp. 287-291.

2003 Robert W. Lake, “Dilemmas of environmental planning in post-urban New Jersey,” Social

Science Quarterly 84: 1002-1017.

Robert W. Lake, “The power of culture and the culture of power in urban geography in the 1990s,” Urban Geography 24: 461-464.

Robert W. Lake, “The anti-urban angst of urban geography in the 1980s,” Urban Geography 24: 352-355.

2002 Robert W. Lake, “Bring back big government,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 26: 815-822. Robert W. Lake and Kathe Newman, “Differential citizenship in the shadow state,” GeoJournal 58: 109-120.

Robert W. Lake, “Contradictions at the local scale: local implementation of Agenda 21 in the United States,” in Nicholas Low and Brendan Gleeson, eds., Consuming Cities: The Urban Environment in the Global Economy. London: Routledge, pp. 70-90.

1997 Robert W. Lake, “State restructuring, political opportunism, and capital mobility,” in Lynn

Staeheli, Janet Kodras, and Colin Flint, eds., State Devolution in America: Implications for a Diverse Society. Urban Affairs Annual Reviews. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, pp. 3-20.

1996 Robert W. Lake, “Volunteers, NIMBYs, and environmental justice: dilemmas of democratic

practice,” Antipode 28: 160-174. 1994 Robert W. Lake, “Negotiating local autonomy,” Political Geography 13: 423-442.

Robert W. Lake, “Central government limitations on local policy options for environmental protection,” The Professional Geographer 46: 236-242.

1993 Robert W. Lake, “Positivism, ethics, and geographic information systems,” Progress in Human

Geography 17: 404-413.

Robert W. Lake, “Rethinking NIMBY,” Journal of the American Planning Association 59: 87-93. [Winner, Honorable Mention, 1994 Best Feature Award, JAPA].

1992 Robert W. Lake, “Planning and applied geography,” Progress in Human Geography, 16: 414-421.

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Robert W. Lake and Lisa Disch, “Structural constraints and pluralist contradictions in hazardous waste regulation,” Environment and Planning-A 24: 663-681.

1991 Robert W. Lake, “Knowledge is power; power is knowledge,” Journal of Geography in Higher

Education 15: 78-81. 1990 Robert W. Lake and Rebecca Johns, “Legitimation conflicts: the politics of hazardous waste

siting law,” Urban Geography 11: 488-508.

Robert W. Lake and Joanna Regulska, “Political decentralization and capital mobility in planned and market societies: local autonomy in Poland and the United States,” Policy Studies Journal 18: 702-720.

Robert W. Lake, “’Urban fortunes: the political economy of place:’ a commentary,” Urban Geography 11: 179-184.

1989 Robert W. Lake, “Employment and housing transformations in New York City: a challenge to

planning,” in John S. Adams, ed., The Geographic Evolution of the United States Urban System. Moscow: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1989, pp. 120-153.

1986 Robert W. Lake, “Unresolved themes in the evolution of fair housing,” in John M. Goering, ed.

Housing Desegregation and Federal Policy. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1986, pp. 313-326.

Robert W. Lake, “New Jersey's infrastructure: trends and issues,” in New Jersey: Outlook for the Future. Trenton: New Jersey Office of Management and Budget, 1986, pp. 294-312.

1984 Robert W. Lake, “Changing symptoms, constant causes: recent evolution of fair housing in the

United States,” New Community 11 (1984) 206-213. Robert W. Lake, “New Jersey: a case study,” in U.S. Congress, Joint Economic Committee, Hard Choices: A Report on the Increasing Gap Between America's Infrastructure Needs and Our Ability to Pay For Them. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1984, pp. 1-71.

Robert W. Lake, “New Jersey: profile of state infrastructure requirements,” in U.S. Congress, Joint Economic Committee, Hard Choices: A Report on the Increasing Gap Between America's Infrastructure Needs and Our Ability to Pay For Them. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1984, pp. 179-182.

1981 Robert W. Lake and Jessica Winslow, “Integration management: municipal constraints on

residential mobility,” Urban Geography 2 (1981) 311-326.

Robert W. Lake, “The Fair Housing Act in a discriminatory market: the persisting dilemma,” Journal of the American Planning Association 47 (1981) 48-58.

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1980 Robert W. Lake, “Racial transition and black homeownership in American suburbs,” in George Sternlieb and James W. Hughes, eds., America's Housing: Prospects and Problems (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Center for Urban Policy Research, 1980), pp. 419-438.

Robert W. Lake, “Housing search experiences of black and white suburban homebuyers,” in George Sternlieb and James W. Hughes, eds., America's Housing: Prospects and Problems (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Center for Urban Policy Research, 1980), pp. 439-484.

Robert W. Lake and Susan Cutter, “A typology of black suburbanization in New Jersey since 1970,” Geographical Review 70 (1980) 167-181.

1979 Robert W. Lake, “Racial transition and black homeownership in American suburbs,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 441 (1979) 142-156.

1977 Robert W. Lake, “Housing the nation,” Journal of the American Real Estate and Urban

Economics Association 5 (1977) 141-146. 1976 George Sternlieb and Robert W. Lake, “The dynamics of real estate tax delinquency,” National

Tax Journal 29 (1976) 261-271.

Terry Rosenberg and Robert W. Lake, “Towards a revised model of residential segregation and succession: Puerto Ricans in New York, 1960-1970,” American Journal of Sociology 81 (1976) 1142-1150.

Brian J.L. Berry, Carole A. Goodwin, Robert W. Lake, and Katherine B. Smith, “Attitudes toward integration: the role of status in community response to racial change,” in Barry Schwartz, ed., The Changing Face of the Suburbs (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976), pp. 221-264.

1975 George Sternlieb and Robert W. Lake, “Aging suburbs and black homeownership,” Annals of the

American Academy of Political and Social Science 422 (1975) 105-117.

PUBLICATIONS – Work in Progress Book manuscripts in preparation Robert W. Lake, Lovers and Knowers: Pragmatism and the Politics of Knowledge Production. Robert W. Lake, Land Wars: Fictitious Urbanization and the Politics of Land Development. D. Asher Ghertner and Robert W. Lake, eds. Land Fictions: Commodification of Land in City and Country. Jane Wills and Robert W. Lake, eds. The Power of Pragmatism: Research and Knowledge Production in Social Science.

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PUBLICATIONS – Editorials, Essays, and Commentaries Robert W. Lake. 2010. “Environmental justice,” Encyclopedia of Urban Studies. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, pp. 245-248. Robert W. Lake. 2009. “People: Brian J.L. Berry,” International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. Oxford: Elsevier, pp. 315-319. Robert W. Lake. 2004. “Editorial: Pluralism as principle in urban geography,” Urban Geography 25: 501-502. Robert W. Lake. 2002. “Editorial: Just the facts,” Urban Geography 23: 701-702. Robert W. Lake. 2001. “Locational Conflict/NIMBY,” International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, third revised ed. New York: Elsevier, pp. 9019-9024. Robert W. Lake and Susan Hanson. 2000. Towards a Comprehensive Geographical Perspective on Urban Sustainability. Final Report of the 1998 National Science Foundation Workshop on Urban Sustainability, January. Robert W. Lake and Susan Hanson. 2000. “Editorial: Needed: geographic research on urban sustainability,” Urban Geography, 21: 1-4; Economic Geography, 76: 1-3. Robert W. Lake. 1999. “Postmodern urbanism?” Urban Geography, 20: 393-395. Robert W. Lake. 1997. “Chauncy Harris and Edward Ullman, ‘The nature of cities:’ a fiftieth year commemoration,” Urban Geography, 18: 1-3. Robert W. Lake. 1995. “Editorial: Spatial fix 2 – the sequel,” Urban Geography, 16: 189-91. Robert W. Lake. 1994. “Editorial: Democracy and the transformation of the public sphere,” Urban Geography, 15: 601-602. Robert W. Lake: 1994. “Editorial: What urban policy?” Urban Geography, 15: 205-206. Robert W. Lake. 1993. “Editorial: In praise of eclecticism,” Urban Geography, 14: 505-506. Robert W. Lake. 1993. “Editorial: Challenge assumptions!” Urban Geography, 14: 221-223. Robert W. Lake. 1992. “Central government limitations on local policy options for environmental protection,” Proceedings of the Korea-U.S.A. Joint Seminar on Scientific Methodology for Regional Environment, Korea Section of the Regional Science Association, pp. 125-136. Robert W. Lake. 1992. “Rethinking NIMBY,” in Conference Proceedings, Resolving Locational Conflicts: Jobs, Housing and Transportation: The Balancing Act, David A. de Kok and Marshall A. Worden, eds., Working Paper R92-05, University of Arizona, pp. 115-119.

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Joanna Regulska and Robert W. Lake. 1987. “New CES Research Planning Group: The impact of political systems on urban policy: decentralization in Poland, Sweden, and the United States,” European Studies Newsletter, 16: 10-14. Robert W. Lake and Mamie Jurkat. 1986. “Hazardous Waste Siting and Public Opposition: An Annotated Bibliography,” Rutgers University Department of Geography Discussion Papers Series, No. 26. PUBLICATIONS - Book Reviews Review of Marc Doussard, Degraded Work: The Struggle at the Bottom of the Labor Market, in AAG Review of Books, 2017, in press. Review symposium: “Poverty/Theory.” Review of Ananya Roy and Emma Shaw Crane, eds. Territories of Poverty, in Progress in Human Geography 41,3 (2017) 398-400. DOI: 10.1177/0309132516655634.

Review of Susan Fainstein, The Just City, in Journal of Planning Education and Research 34 (2014) 358-360. Review of Claire Rasmussen, The Autonomous Animal: Self-Governance and the Modern Subject, in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, http://societyandspace.com/reviews/reviews-archive/rasmussen-claire-2011-the-autonomous-animal-reviewed-by-robert-lake/ (2012). Review of Francesco Lo Piccolo and Huw Thomas, Ethics and Planning Research, in Journal of the American Planning Association 78 (2012) 114-115. Review symposium: “Making Space.” Review of Briggs, The Geography of Opportunity; Crampton & Elden, Space, Knowledge and Power; Faludi, Territorial Cohesion and the European Model of Society; Faludi, European Spatial Research and Planning; Knowles, Placing History; Robertson et al, Space and Spatial Analysis in Archaeology, in Journal of Planning History, 9 (2010) 277-285. Review of Robert Inman, ed., Making Cities Work: Prospects and Policies for Urban America, in Journal of Regional Science, 50 (2010) 789-791. Review of Robert Beauregard, When America Became Suburban, in Urban Geography, 28 (2007) 483-484. Review of James DeFilippis, Unmaking Goliath: Community Control in the Face of Global Capital, in Urban Geography, 26 (2005) 290-292. Review of Neil Brenner, Bob Jessop, Martin Jones, and Gordon MacLeod, eds., State/Space, in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 23 (2004) 313-314. Review of Nicholas Blomley, David Delaney and Richard Ford, eds., The Legal Geographies Reader, in Political Geography, 23 (2004) 229-231.

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Review of Matthew Gandy, Concrete and Clay: Reworking Nature in New York City, in Antipode, 35 (2003) 1013-1017. Review of Andrew Jonas and David Wilson (eds.), The Urban Growth Machine: Critical Perspectives Two Decades Later, in Environment and Planning-A, 32, (2000) 1891-1892. Review of Michael Clark, Denis Smith, and Andrew Blowers (eds.), Waste Location: Spatial Aspects of Waste Management, Hazards and Disposal, in Tijdschrift Voor Economishe en Sociale Geografie (Journal of Economic and Social Geography), 84 (1993) 237-238. Review of John Logan and Harvey Molotch, Urban Fortunes, in Urban Geography, 11 (1990) 179-184. Review of Ann Markusen, Profit Cycles, Oligopoly, and Regional Development, in Urban Geography, 8 (1987) 161-163. Review of Michael H. Schill and Richard P. Nathan, Revitalizing America’s Cities, in Urban Geography, 6 (1985) 280-281. Review of Olivier Zunz, The Changing Face of Inequality: Urbanization, Industrial Development, and Immigrants in Detroit, 1880-1920, in Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 74 (1984) 504-506. Review of William Michelson, Environmental Choice, Human Behavior, and Residential Satisfaction, in Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 68 (1978) 583-586. Review of William H. Ittelson (ed.), Environment and Cognition, in Special Libraries Association, Geography and Map Librarian's Bulletin (1974). RESEARCH REPORTS Robert W. Lake, Kathe Newman, Philip Ashton, Richard Nisa, and Bradley Wilson, Civic Engagement in Camden, New Jersey: A Baseline Portrait, MDRC and the Ford Foundation, New York (September 2007). Robert W. Lake, Robin Leichenko, and Amy K. Glasmeier, The Role of the Economic Development Administration in Efforts to Alleviate Economic Distress Since 1965, Economic Development Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC (July 2004). Robert W. Lake, Increasing the Effectiveness of the State Plan for New Jersey’s Urban Areas: Final Report of the Urban Policy Analysis Project, NJ Office of State Planning, Trenton, NJ (March 1999). Robert W. Lake, Tax Incentives for Pollution Prevention in New Jersey, NJ Department of Environmental Protection, Trenton, NJ (May 1997). Robert W. Lake, Rating Methods and Incentives for Pollution Prevention: A Survey of New Jersey Businesses, NJ Department of Environmental Protection, Trenton, NJ (February 1996).

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Robert W. Lake and Marva Williams, Analysis of New Jersey Tax Incentive Programs, NJ Department of Environmental Protection, Trenton, NJ (August 1994). Robert W. Lake and Marva Williams, Preliminary Report on State Approaches to Pollution Prevention, NJ Department of Environmental Protection, Trenton, NJ (March 1994). Robert W. Lake and Marva Williams, Annotated Bibliography of References on Pollution Prevention, NJ Department of Environmental Protection, Trenton, NJ (March 1994). Robert W. Lake, Impediments to Fair Housing in Rockland County, Rockland County Community Housing Resource Board, Rockland County, NY (December 1993). Robert W. Lake, Racial Residential Segregation in Middlesex County, New Jersey, Housing Coalition of Middlesex County, New Brunswick, NJ (May 1988). Robert W. Lake, Review of Television City Market Potential and Impact Studies, People for Westpride, Inc., New York, NY (March 1988). Robert W. Lake, Evaluation of the Television City Draft Environmental Impact Statement Retail Component, People for Westpride, Inc., New York, NY (December 1987). Robert W. Lake, The Demand and Supply of Low-Cost Housing in the Nassau County Housing Region, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison, New York, NY (May 1985). Robert W. Lake, New Jersey's Infrastructure: Trends and Issues, NJ Department of the Treasury, Office of Management and Budget, Trenton, NJ (June 1984). Robert W. Lake, New Jersey's Infrastructure Needs: A Case Study, U.S. Congress, Joint Economic Committee, Washington, DC (February 1983). Robert W. Lake, Towards an Approach to Measuring the Effectiveness of Community Housing Resource Boards, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research, Washington, DC (August 1982). Robert W. Lake, Property Tax Delinquency in Trenton, NJ, City of Trenton, Department of Planning and Development (1978). Robert W. Lake, Resident's Evaluations of Municipal Services in Philadelphia: Implications for Alternative Tax Scenarios, City of Philadelphia, Department of Finance (1977). Robert W. Lake, Household Size and School-Age Children Multipliers for Fiscal Impact Analysis, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (1976). Robert W. Lake, Demographic Profiles of Residents of Standard Housing Types, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (1976).

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Robert W. Lake, Regional and Temporal Variation in Demographic Multipliers, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (1976). Robert W. Lake, The Magnitude and Determinants of Property Tax Delinquency in Pittsburgh, City of Pittsburgh, Office of the Mayor and Department of City Planning (1975). Robert W. Lake, Middle-Class Black Suburbanization in the Zone of Emergence, The Ford Foundation, New York, NY (1975). INVITED LECTURES AND PROFESSIONAL PAPERS 2017 “Hope for Democracy: Pragmatism Between Populism and Expertise,” Keynote Lecture,

International Conference on Human Geography and the Pragmatic Tradition, Queen Mary University of London, May.

“What Does Pragmatism Bring to Human Geography?” Research Frameworks Seminar, Queen

Mary University London, May. “Doing Pragmatist Geography,” Postgraduate Research Workshop, Queen Mary University

London, May. “The New Class Structure of Social Impact Finance,” Urban Futures Lecture Series, Department

of Geography, Kings College London, UK, May. “Privatization of Urban Governance and the New Class Structure of Social Impact Finance,”

Urban Affairs Association Annual Meeting, Minneapolis, April. “Privatization of Urban Governance and the New Class Structure of Social Impact Finance,”

American Association of Geographers, Boston, April. “The New Class Structure of Social Impact Finance,” International Conference on Social Finance,

Impact Investing, and Financialization of the Public Interest, Centre for Globalization and Governance, University of Hamburg, Germany, March.

“Locating the Social in Social Justice: Dewey, Individualism and Social Action,” New York Pragmatist Forum, Fordham University, New York, NY, February.

2016 “Lovers, Knowers, Athens, Jerusalem: On Not Degenerating into a Research Inquiry,” Department of Geography, University of Washington-Seattle, June.

“Justice as Subject and Object of Planning,” Urban Studies Colloquium, University of Washington-Tacoma, June.

“Poetry, Pragmatism, and the Urban Possibility of Creative Democracy,” 2nd EMES-Polanyi International Seminar, EMES International Research Network, Paris, France, May.

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“On Poetry, Pragmatism and the Urban Possibility of Creative Democracy,” 2016 Urban Geography Plenary Lecture, American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, March.

“On Not Knowing the Answer,” Keynote Address, Eighth Annual Krueckeberg Doctoral

Conference in Urban Studies, Urban Planning, and Public Policy, Rutgers University, March. 2015 “Selling Stories: Entrepreneurial Narratives of Social Entrepreneurialism,” Association of

Collegiate Schools of Planning Annual Meeting, Houston, TX, October. “Collective Humanism?” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Annual Meeting, Houston,

TX, October.

“Justice as Subject and Object of Planning,” Colloquium on City and Regional Futures: Planning Practice, Policy and Design, Department of City and Regional Planning, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, October.

“Lovers and Knowers: Athens, Jerusalem and Modes of Inquiry in the Social Sciences,” Graduate

Student Association Speakers Series, Department of Geography and Urban Studies, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, September.

“Justice as Subject and Object of Planning,” PhD Summer Seminar, Graduate School of

Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University, New York, NY, July.

“Where Materiality Meets Subjectivity: Locating the Political in the Contested Fiction of Urban Land,” Land Fictions: The Commodification of Land in City and Country, Seventh Annual MaGrann Conference, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, May.

“Where Materiality Meets Subjectivity: Locating the Political in the Contested Fiction of Urban Land,” American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, April.

“Big Data and the Construction of Urban Subjects: Radical Individualism, False Consciousness,

and the End of Community,” UIC Symposium: The Crowd, the Cloud and Urban Governance,” University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, April.

“Lovers, Knowers, Athens, Jerusalem: On Not Degenerating Into a Research Inquiry,” Department of Geography Faculty Colloquium, Rutgers University, February.

2014 “Protecting the ‘Public’ in Public Policy: The Growing Privatization of the Public Realm,”

Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, November.

“Autonomous Planning,” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, October.

“Social Enterprise, Impact Investing, and the End of Urban Public Policy,” Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Tampa, FL, April.

Robert W. Lake page 14

“Failure or Fallibility? Critical Irony in the Construction of Urban Public Policy,” Urban Affairs Association Annual Meeting, San Antonio, TX, March.

“Public Participation in the United States: Why? What? How?” Executive Training Program in Public Administration-Jiangxi Province, China; Rutgers University School of Social Work and Centers for Global Advancement and International Affairs, New Brunswick, NJ, January.

2013 “The Financialization of Urban Policy in the Age of Obama,” Department of Geography Faculty

Colloquium, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, October.

“Planning Desire: Participatory Planning, Governmentality, and Construction of the Planning Subject,” AESOP/ACSP 2013 Joint Congress, Dublin, Ireland, July.

“Economics of/and Urban Policy in the Age of Obama,” Urban Affairs Association Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April.

“Anticipations of PAR: Dewey, Democracy and Social Hope,” Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, April.

2012 “Justice as Subject and Object of Planning,” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning,

Cincinnati, OH, November. “The Urban Politics of Land Development,” Critical Social/Personality and Environmental

Psychology Colloquium Series, The Graduate Center, CUNY, October.

“Methods and Moral Judgments,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, New York, NY, February. 2011 “Dilemmas of Localism in Local Community Development,” Critical Geography Conference, Clark

University, Worcester, MA, November.

“Who Says? Authority, Voice, and Authorship in Narratives of Planning Research,” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Annual Conference, Salt Lake City, UT, October.

2010 “Revisiting the Shadow State in Post-Categorical Theory,” Critical Geography Conference,

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, November. “Lovers and Knowers: Athens, Jerusalem, and Modes of Inquiry in the Social Sciences,”

Department of Geography Faculty Colloquium, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champagne, September.

“Land Grab: Urban Redevelopment as Fiscal Policy in the Post-Industrial City,” Association of

American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, April. 2009 “People, Plans, and Profits: Human Capital and Commodification in Urban Revitalization,”

Program in Urban and Community Studies, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, April.

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2008 “Land Wars: Human Capital, Racialization, and Commodification as Governance Strategies in Urban Revitalization,” Fourth Biennial Race, Ethnicity, and Place Conference, Miami, FL, November.

“Human Capital Policy and the Commodification of Urban Residence: Governance Strategies

Mediating the Right to the City,” European Science Foundation Research Conference: The Right to the City: New Challenges, New Issues,” Vadstena, Sweden, October.

“Lovers and Knowers,” Political Geography Specialty Group Pre-Conference, Association of

American Geographers, Clark University, Worcester, MA, April.

“Fictitious Urbanization: The Multiple Relational Geographies of Urban Redevelopment,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April.

“Fictitious Urbanization: The Multiple Relational Geographies of Urban Redevelopment,” Harold

Mayer Lecture in Urban Geography, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, March. “The Multiple Relational Geographies of Urban Redevelopment,” Inaugural James O. Wheeler

Lecture in Urban Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, February. 2006 “Open for Business: State Policy and the Transformation of Urban Governance,” Urban Seminar,

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, February. “Open for Business: State Policy and the Transformation of Urban Governance,” Association of

American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, March. 2005 “The Death and Life of Community Development in an Era of Globalization,” Plenary Address,

International Geographic Union, Commission on Monitoring Cities of Tomorrow, Tokyo, Japan, August.

“The Death of Community in Community Development Politics Since 1968,” Department of

Geography, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, March. “Neighborhood Planning and the Neoliberalization of Urban Protest,” Association of American

Geographers, Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April. “Culture Wars, Electoral Geography, and the End of Empire,” Association of American

Geographers, Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April. “The Personal, the Professional, and the Political,” Urban Affairs Association, Salt Lake City, UT,

April. 2004 “The Death of Community in Community Development Politics Since 1968,” Keynote Address,

Miami Consortium for Urban Studies, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, November.

“Democracy, Bureaucracy and Difference in Community Development Politics Since 1968,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, March.

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“Recentering the City,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, March.

“Urban Crisis Redux,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, March. “Innovative Practices and Community-University Partnerships at a Distance,” The Community-University Learning Initiative Planning Project, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, January.

2003 “Reassessing Megalopolis: Ideology and Myth in Gottmann’s Regional Geography,” Middle States Division, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Albany, NY, October.

“The Anti-Urban Angst of Urban Geography in the 1980s,” Association of American

Geographers, Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, March.

“The Power of Culture and the Culture of Power in Urban Geography in the 1990s,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, March.

2002 “Differential Citizenship in the Shadow State,” International Conference on Rights to the City,

Rome, Italy, June.

“Exclusionary Environmentalism, Local Self-Sufficiency, and Dilemmas of Scale in Urban Environmental Politics,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, March.

“Planned Nature and the Nature of Planning in New York City,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, March.

2001 “Forging Effective University-Community Partnerships in the Baltic Nations: Opportunities and

Challenges,” American Embassy, The American Center-Vilnius, and the American Institute of Kaunas University, Vilnius, Lithuania, November.

“Bring Back Big Government,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, New York, NY, March.

2000 “The Implausibility of Local Self-Sufficiency and the Necessity of Local Autonomy,” Second

Sustainable Cities Network Conference, Manchester, UK, September.

“Dilemmas of Environmental Planning in Post-Urban New Jersey,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh, PA, April. “Geographic Approaches to Urban Policy,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh, PA, April.

1998 “The Implausibility of Local Sustainability and the Necessity of Local Autonomy,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, March.

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“Contradictions at the Local Scale: Local Agenda 21 and the Limitations of Municipal Sustainability Programs,” Contemporary Issues in Urban Affairs and Public Policy Colloquium, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, March.

1997 “Contradictions at the Local Scale: Local Implementation of Agenda 21 in the United States,” International Conference on Environmental Justice: Global Ethics for the 21st Century, Melbourne, Australia, October.

“State versus Capital: The Shifting Limits of Local Autonomy in Camden, New Jersey,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Fort Worth, TX, April.

“Tax Incentives for Pollution Prevention in New Jersey,” New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Trenton, NJ, January and April.

1996 “Potentials and Pitfalls of Public Participation in Planning and Community Development,” U.S.-Japan Metropolitan Planning Exchange (Metroplex), Tokyo Symposium “Towards Community-Oriented Planning,” Tokyo, Japan, July.

“Ethical Dilemmas of Sustainability,” Planners Network Annual Conference, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY, June.

“Whose State? Which Economy? What Crisis? Economic Restructuring, Political Instrumentality, and the Contract With America,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Charlotte, NC, April.

“Democratic Dilemmas of Sustainability,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Charlotte, NC, April.

1995 “Volunteers, NIMBYs and Environmental Justice: Dilemmas of Democratic Practice,” Association

of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, March. 1994 “Risk, Costs, and the Legitimation of Public Policy,” Society of Risk Analysis, Annual Meeting,

Baltimore, MD, December.

“Bureaucratic Control Versus Local Autonomy: Designing a Policy for Radioactive Waste Disposal,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April.

1993 “Negotiating Local Autonomy,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Atlanta,

GA, April. 1992 “What Do Communities Want? -- The U.S. Experience,” ECOPOLI Conference, Turin, Italy,

December.

“Hazardous Waste Facility Siting: The U.S. Experience,” Department of Political Science, University of Turin, Italy, December.

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“Central Government Limitations on Local Policy Options for Environmental Protection,” Korea-United States Joint Seminar on Geographic Dimensions of National Social and Economic Policy, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, November.

“NIMBY: Obstruction or Empowerment?” Conference on Empowering Political and Economic Transformations, Political Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, April.

“Rethinking NIMBY,” Conference on Resolving Locational Conflict, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, January.

1991 “Hazardous Waste Facility Siting: The U.S. Experience,” Faculty of Geographical Sciences,

University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, May.

“Locational Conflicts in Hazardous Waste Facility Siting: The U.S. Experience,” Centre for Housing and Urban Research, University of Örebro, Sweden, April.

1990 “Recent Geographical Perspectives on the Social Construction of Race and Place,” Annual

Meeting of the American Historical Association, New York, NY, December.

“Potentials and Pitfalls of Public Participation in Urban Planning and Policymaking,” International Conference on Creating Urban Policy Under Government Reorganization: Poland's Needs, U.S. Lessons," Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, November.

“Compensation and Community Concerns: Missing the Mark,” International Symposium on Hazardous Materials: Social Aspects of Facility Planning and Management, Toronto, Ontario, October.

“Urban Development in the 1990s: Local Empowerment in the International Economy,” Conference on Cities of the 1990s, Ohio State University Urban Affairs Committee, Columbus, OH, September.

“Legitimation Conflicts: The Politics of Hazardous Waste Siting Law,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Toronto, Ontario, April.

1989 “Changing Central-Local Government Relations in the United States,” Third Annual Meeting of the Research Planning Group (RPG) on the Impact of Political Systems on Urban Policy, Warsaw, Poland, June.

“The Shape of the Table: Negotiating the Context of Negotiations,” Center for Negotiation and Conflict Resolution, New Brunswick, NJ, May. “’Urban Fortunes: The Political Economy of Place,’ A Commentary,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Baltimore, MD, March.

1988 “Class Capacity and Structural Constraints in Hazardous Waste Siting Conflicts,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Phoenix, AZ, April.

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1987 “Decentralization versus Deconcentration in Planned and Market Societies: The U.S. and Poland,” Sixth International Conference of Europeanists, Washington, DC, October.

“Employment and Housing Transformations in New York City,” U.S.-U.S.S.R. Joint Seminar in Urban Geography, American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) and the Soviet Academy of Sciences, Milwaukee, WI, July.

“Pluralist Contradictions in Community Conflict Over Siting Hazardous Waste Facilities,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Portland, OR, April.

1986 “Defining the Public for Public Participation in Hazardous Waste Management,” Association of

American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Minneapolis, MN, May. 1985 “Future Housing Trends in New Jersey,” New Jersey Division on Civil Rights and the New Jersey

Real Estate Commission, Woodbridge, NJ, May.

“Conflicting Goals in Fair Housing in the United States,” Urban Affairs Seminar Series, State University of New York at Albany, May.

1984 “Assessing Infrastructure Needs: Findings from and Implications of the National Infrastructure Study,” Annual Conference, Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning, New York, NY, October.

“Public Policy Influences on Black Residential Mobility,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, April.

1983 “Community and Conformity in the Structure/Agency Debate,” Association of American

Geographers, Middle States Division, Annual Meeting, West Point, NY, October.

“Research Priorities in Urban Geography,” Urban Geography Specialty Group Roundtable, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Denver, Co, April. "Suburban Racial Segregation and Municipal Fiscal Condition," Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April. “Suburban Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation: Implications for Fair Housing Policy in the 1980s,” Charles K. Colver Lecture, Urban Studies Program, Brown University, Providence, RI, March.

“Housing Price Discrimination and Equity Accumulation in the Black Middle Class,” Department of Sociology, Graduate Seminar, Brown University, Providence, RI, March. 1982 “Towards an Approach to Measuring the Effectiveness of Community Housing Resource

Boards,” National Community Housing Resource Board Pre-Conference Planning Workshop, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Washington, DC, August.

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“Fair Housing: The National Perspective,” Housing Discrimination Training Conference, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Region II, Cherry Hill, NJ, July.

1981 “Integration Management: Municipal Constraints on Residential Mobility,” Association of

American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, April. 1980 “Recent Patterns of Black Suburbanization,” Association of American Geographers, Middle

States Division, Annual Meeting, Newark, DE, October.

“Access to Housing,” Middlesex County, NJ, Planning Board, Conference on Housing in Middlesex County, June.

“Black Access to Suburban Homeownership: Recommendations for Policy,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Louisville, KY, April.

1979 “Housing Search Experiences of Black and White Suburban Homebuyers,” Seminar Presentation, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research, Washington, DC, December 1979.

“Social Processes in Monitoring Environmental Change,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, April 1979.

1978 “Towards a Phenomenological Approach to a Holistic Concept of the City,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, April 1978. 1979 “The Fetishism of Space in Geographic Theory,” University of California, Berkeley, Department of Geography Faculty Seminar, November 1977. “Property Tax Delinquency and the Redistribution of Private Investment in the Central City,” University of California, Berkeley, Department of Geography Faculty Seminar, October 1977. “Geometric and Phenomenological Space in Geographic Theory,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Salt Lake City, UT, April 1977.

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PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITY Co-Organizer and Co-Chair, International Conference on Human Geography and the Pragmatist Tradition,” Queen Mary University of London, May 2017. Panelist, Author-Meets-the-Critics Session on Marc Doussard’s Degraded Work: The Struggle at the Bottom of the Labor Market, American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, March 2017. Discussant, “More Than Metaphor: The Urban Frontier and Shifting Strategies of Accumulation;” Discussant, “Practical Pragmatism: Towards a ‘Post-Critical Urban Political Geography?” American Association of Geographers, Boston, MA, March 2017 Panelist, “An Assessment of Urban Policy in the Obama Administration,” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Annual Meeting, Portland, OR, November 2016. Panelist, Progress in Human Geography Authors-Meet-Critics, Ananya Roy and Emma Shaw Crane, eds., Territories of Poverty: Rethinking North and South, American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, March 2016. Organizer and Panel Chair, Roundtable: Camden, NJ, “ Shifting Cities: Urban Heritage in the 21st Century,” Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, November 2015. Chair and Discussant, Session on “Understanding Urban Austerity: Fiscal Crisis and the Role of the State,” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Annual Meeting, Houston, TX, October 2015. Co-Organizer, “Land Fictions,” 7th Annual MaGrann Conference, Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, May 2015. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture; Discussant, Session on “Non-Profits, Governance and the Welfare State in the Post-Economic Crisis Period;” Discussant, AAG Nystrom Dissertation Award sessions; American Association of Geographers, Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, April 2015. Panelist, “Big Data and the Construction of Urban Subjects: Radical Individualism, False Consciousness, and the End of Community.” UIC Symposium: The Crowd, The Cloud, and Urban Governance, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL, April 2015. Panelist, “Assessing the Role of the State in the Contemporary Urban,” Urban Affairs Association Annual Meeting, Miami, FL, April 2015. Chair, Session on “Seeds Within: Urban Dialectics and Transformative Productions of Space,” Critical Geography Conference, Philadelphia, PA, November 2014. Panelist, “Protecting the ‘Public’ in Public Policy: The Growing Privatization of the Public Realm,” Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, November 2014.

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Discussant, Session on “Deleuze and Planning,” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, October 2014. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture; Organizer and Chair, Two sessions on “Financialization of Urban Governance in the Post-Entrepreneurial State, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Tampa, FL, April 2014. Moderator, Session on “The Politics of Spatial Planning,” AESOP/ACSP 2013 Joint Congress, Dublin, Ireland, July. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture; Organizer and Chair, Session on “Pragmatism and Geography: Continuing the Conversation,” Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, April 2013. Chair and Discussant, Session on “Planning Ethics Revisited,” Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning, Annual Meeting, Cincinnati, OH, November 2012. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture; Discussant, Session on “New Organizing: Constraints and Contestation in Local and Regional Organizing;” Discussant, Session on “Towards Methods of Possibility;” Panel member, “Author Meets Critics: The Autonomous Animal by Claire Rasmussen,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, New York, NY, February 2012. Panel Moderator, Careers in Community Development, Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, New Brunswick, NJ, November 2011. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture; Discussant, Session on “The Shadow State,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, April 2011. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture; Organizer and Chair, Three sessions on “Land Wars: The Politics of Urban Land Development in the Post-Industrial City;” Panel member, “Planning and Geography: Kindred Souls or Ships Passing in the Night?”; Discussant, Session on “Democracy and the Public Sphere in a Web 2.0 World,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, April 2010. Organizer and Chair, Panel Discussion on “Architecture, Urbanism, and Sustainability,” Series on Ecologies in the Balance, Rutgers University Office of International Programs, New Brunswick, NJ, April 2010. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture; Discussant, Session on “The New Urban Politics;” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, March 2009. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture; Organizer and Chair, “Planning and the Just City;” Panel member, “Publishing in Urban Geography;” Panel member, “Territory, the State, and Urban Politics;” Panel member, “Feminism and Geography Post-collision,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, April 2008.

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Organizer, “Resistance: Globalization and Its Other,” Global Initiatives 2007-2008 Lecture Series, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, September 2007 – April 2008. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 2007. Co-Organizer, Three sessions on “Theorizing Urban Governance;” Organizer and Chair, Author Meets the Critics Session; Panel Participant, “The Western City as a Research Object,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 2007. Organizer and Chair, Urban Geography Plenary Lecture, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, March 2006. Co-Organizer, Session on “Activism and Expertise: Modes of Engagement in the Politics of Urban Development;” Discussant, Session on “Comparative Urbanism;” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April 2005. Panelist, “The Possibility of Heterodox GIS,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April 2005. Chair, Session on “Markets, Politics and Urban Change,” Urban Affairs Association, Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, April 2004. Organizer and Chair, Three sessions on “University-Community Partnerships for Research and Activism,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, March 2002. Co-Organizer and Co-Chair, National Science Foundation Research Workshop: “Towards a Comprehensive Geographic Perspective on Urban Sustainability,” Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, June 1998. Organizer and Chair, Session on “Constructing the Local;” Organizer and Chair, Panel Discussion: “Local Impacts of Changing Environmental Policy: Conceptual Approaches and Research Strategies;” Organizer and Chair, Session on “The Politics of Public Space;” Discussant, Session on “Issues in Environmental Justice and Equity Research,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, March 1998. Organizer and Chair, Session on “Author Meets the Critics: Don Mitchell’s ‘The Lie of the Land: Migrant Workers and the California Landscape;’” Organizer, session on “Scales of Justice;” Chair, two sessions on “The Social Construction of Public Space;” Discussant, session on “Globalization and the North American City,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Fort Worth, TX, April 1997. Organizer and Chair, two sessions on “Street-Level Democracy,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, March 1995. Discussant, Session on “The Voluntary Sector: Empowerment, Activism and Urban Politics,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, March 1995.

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Organizer and Chair, Session on “The Political Construction of Community,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 1994. Discussant, Session on “Planning in an Unstable Metropolis: Los Angeles,” Annual Meeting of the American Collegiate Schools of Planning, Philadelphia, PA, October 1993. Organizer and Panel Chair, Session on “Managing Actual Facility Impact,” International Symposium on Hazardous Materials: Social Aspects of Facility Planning and Management, Toronto, Canada, October 1990. Delegate, Representative of the Association of American Geographers at the Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Philadelphia, PA, April 1988. Panel Member, Applied Geography Specialty Group Panel: “Hazardous Waste: Can We Dispose of It?” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Phoenix, AZ, April 1988. Discussant, Session on Racism: Segregation, Housing and Politics, sponsored by the Urban Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Phoenix, AZ, April 1988. Discussant, Session on Changing Patterns in Contemporary American Metropolises, sponsored by the Urban Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Phoenix, AZ, April 1988. Co-Organizer and Chair, Session on “Political Restructuring and Urban Policy in Europe and the United States,” Sixth Conference of Europeanists, Council for European Studies, Washington, DC, October 1987. Planning Committee, U.S.-U.S.S.R. Joint Seminar in Urban Geography, sponsored by the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) and the Soviet Academy of Sciences, Milwaukee, WI, July 1987. Organizer and Chair, Panel Discussion: “Authors Meet the Critics: Clark, Gertler, and Whiteman's Regional Dynamics,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Portland, OR, April 1987. Discussant, Session on Race, Ethnicity, and Residential Patterns, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Portland, OR, April 1987. Discussant, Workshop on the Dual City, Committee on New York City, Social Science Research Council, New York, NY, October 1986. Organizer and Chair, Panel Discussion: “Author Meets the Critics: Ann Markusen’s Profit Cycles, Oligopoly, and Regional Development,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Minneapolis, MN, May 1986. Discussant, Session on Inter-Urban Migration, sponsored by the Population Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Detroit, MI, April 1985. Discussant, Session on Race and Housing, Eastern Economics Association, Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, March 1983.

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Organizer, Roundtable Discussion, “Competing Theoretical and Cross-Cultural Approaches in Urban Geography,” Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, San Antonio, TX, April 1982. Discussant, Session on Population Distribution and Policy, Northeast Regional Science Association, Annual Meeting, New Brunswick, NJ, May 1981. TEACHING Teaching Awards Teaching Excellence Award-Doctoral Level, Northeastern Association of Graduate Schools, 2015. Graduate Teaching Excellence Award, The Graduate School-NB, Rutgers University, 2015. Jerome Rose Excellence in Teaching Award, Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, 2012. Undergraduate Courses: Geography 411 Urban Geography Graduate Courses: Geography 519 Problems in Political Geography Geography 603 Graduate Research Proseminar Geography 606 Seminar: The Aging City Urban Planning 501 History and Theory of Planning Urban Planning 509 Urban Economy and Spatial Patterns Urban Planning 575 Locational Conflict Urban Planning 614 Location Theory and Practice Urban Planning 624 Planning, Public Policy and Social Theory Urban Planning 626 Advanced Scholarly Research Urban Planning 653 Social Justice, Planning and Public Policy Ph.D. Committees Chaired — In Progress: Brian Baldor (Planning and Public Policy), “Urban Informatics and Governance in New York City.” Neiset Bayouth (Geography), “Marketing Identity, Negotiating Boundaries: Arab Entrepreneurship and the Emergence of Coffeehouses and Narghile Lounges in the United States.” Samantha Bowden (Geography), “Biking While Black in Tampa.” Ben Gerlofs (Geography), “A Right to Leviathan: Grassroots Movements in the City of Palaces.” Lee Polonsky (Planning and Public Policy), “Assembling Value Through Community Development: Policy and Land Markets in Philadelphia, 2000-2010.”

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Nicolas Vergara (Planning and Public Policy), “Citizenship and Urban Social Movements in Santiago, Chile.” Ph.D. Committees Chaired — Completed: Raysa Martinez Kruger (Geography), “Garbage Governmentalities and Environmental Justice in New Jersey,” 2017. Colette Barrow (Planning and Public Policy), “Whose Neighborhood is This Anyway? A Close Look at Single Mothers Living in Central Harlem and the Power Brokers Changing It,” 2016. Juan Rivero (Planning and Public Policy), “’Saving’ Iconic Places: Coney Island’s Wild Redevelopment Ride,” 2016. Qianqi Shen (Planning and Public Policy), “Negotiating Governance: Central-Local Government Relations in Establishment of Special Economic Zones in China,” 2015. Adam Steinberg (Geography), “Preserving, Planning and Promoting the Lower East Side: The Conflicted Role of the Tenement Museum in New York’s Premier Immigrant Enclave,” 2014. Laura Pangallozzi (Geography), “Social Mix in U.S. Suburbs: Organized and Informal Interventions in Response to Black Settlement,” 2014. Patricia Voltolini (Planning and Public Policy), “From Bargain Mecca to Lifestyle Destination: 14

th Street’s

Metamorphosis and the Making of Neoliberal New York,” 2014. Lindsay Campbell (Geography), “The Politics and Practices of ‘Actually Existing Sustainabilities:’ Urban Forestry and Urban Agriculture in New York City,” 2013. Andrew Zitcer (Planning and Public Policy), “The New ‘New Wave’: Food Cooperatives in the Urban Political Economy,” 2013. Richard Nisa (Geography), “Between Capture and the Camp: Apprehending Prisoners in America’s Wars 1949-2011,” 2012. Erica Avrami (Planning and Public Policy), “Historic Preservation in the Era of Sustainability,” 2012. Natasha Tursi (Planning and Public Policy), “Poverty Deconcentration, Housing Mobility, and the Construction of Recent US Housing Policy: A Discourse Analysis of the Policy-Making Process,” 2011. Alan Cander (Planning and Public Policy), “The Law and Practice of Municipal Land Assembly: Fifty Years of Urban Redevelopment and Community Opposition in Newark, NJ,” 2011. Mi Shih (Planning and Public Policy), “Disputed Relocation and Property Development in Shanghai: Contesting Inner City Renewal Practices, 1990-2005,” 2010.

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Cheryl Gowar (Geography), “Rethinking Citizenship in an Era of Globalization,” 2007. Adam Pine (Geography), “Dominican Bodegas and Neighborhood Economic Development in Philadelphia,” 2007. Jeremy Nemeth (Planning and Public Policy), “Security and the Production of Privately Owned Public Space,” 2007. Jennifer Altman (Planning and Public Policy), “Meeting Community Needs through University-Community Partnerships,” 2006. Mark Pendras (Geography), “The Politics of Capital Mobility: Reconsidering Local Struggles Over the Production of Space Under Conditions of Neoliberal Globalization,” 2005. Laura Liu (Geography), “Placing Identity: Chinese Immigrant Workers and the Politics of Community Organizing in New York City,” 2003. Noriko Ishiyama (Geography), “Native Americans and Environmental Justice: Political, Economic and Ethnic Conflicts Over the Siting of High-Level Radioactive Waste,” 2002. Melina Patterson (Geography), “Activist Education: Community, Identity, and Social Change in Community Schools,” 2002. Yi-Ling Chen (Planning and Public Policy), “Women and Housing in Taiwan,” 2000. Juliana Maantay (Geography), “Regional Benefits versus Local Burdens: Who Pays the Price? Solid Waste Disposal in New York City,” 2000. James DeFilippis (Geography), “Alternatives to Corrective Capitalism: The Realization of Local Autonomy in Community Development,” 1999. Marva Williams (Planning and Public Policy), “Linking Economic Development and Pollution Prevention in New Jersey,” 1997. Rebecca Johns (Geography), “The Politicization of Space and the U.S. Labor Movement: An Analysis of the International Solidarity Strategy,” 1994. Leyla Vural (Geography), “Unionism as a Way of Life,” 1994. Tanya Steinberg (Geography), “The Restructuring of Electronics Manufacturing: Technology, the Production Process, Labor, and Location,” 1993. David Wilson (Geography), “Institutions and Urban Revitalization,” 1985.

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Ph.D. Committees (Member): Current Sangeeta Banerji Geography Alexis Buckley Geography John Legrid Geography Hudson McFann Geography Priti Narayan Geography Khai Nguyen Geography Ariel Otruba Geography Sean Tanner Geography Lena Woodhouse Geography Gina Bienski Planning and Public Policy Aretousa Bloom Planning and Public Policy Morgan Campbell Planning and Public Policy Margaret D’Aversa Planning and Public Policy Evan Casper-Futterman Planning and Public Policy Angela Oberg Planning and Public Policy Miguelina Rodriguez Planning and Public Policy Jonathan Stiles Planning and Public Policy Anjali Srivastava Planning and Public Policy Cathy Wang Planning and Public Policy 2016 Ryan Good Planning and Public Policy Brian Stromberg Planning and Public Policy John West Planning (Columbia University) 2015 Deborah Scott Geography Michael Simmons Planning and Public Policy Ben Teresa Planning and Public Policy 2014 Luke Drake Geography Irene Tung Geography Eric Sarmiento Geography Peter Vancura Geography Akira Drake Planning and Public Policy Katie Himmelfarb Planning and Public Policy 2013 Toby Applegate Geography Kavitha Ramsamy Geography 2012 Nate Gabriel Geography 2011 Kari Burnett Geography Arianna Martinez Planning and Public Policy 2010 Luis Balula Planning and Public Policy Seongjai Kim Planning and Public Policy 2009 Monica Taylor-Jones Planning and Public Policy Bradley Wilson Geography 2008 Ana Baptista Planning and Public Policy 2006 Adam Diamond Geography Stephan Schmidt Planning and Public Policy 2005 Philip Ashton Planning and Public Policy Lalitha Kamath Planning and Public Policy

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Verdie Craig Geography 2004 Sandra Yen Wen Peng Planning and Public Policy Meg Holden Public Affairs, The New School Fereydoun Nikpour Planning and Public Policy 2003 John Kasbarian Geography 2002 Elyse Golob Planning and Public Policy Wanda Mills Planning and Public Policy Deike Peters Planning and Public Policy 2001 Barbara Hildebrant Geography Andrew Stewart Geography Yong-Sook Lee Planning and Public Policy Gavin Shatkin Planning and Public Policy Frances Hoffman Planning and Public Policy Laura Solitare Planning and Public Policy 2000 Ted Kilian Geography James Kendra Geography Karen Nichols Geography Lisa Vandemark Geography 1999 Doracie Zoleta-Nantes Geography Anne Bellows Geography 1998 Marla Emery Geography Ruth Gilmore Geography Mia Gray Planning and Public Policy 1997 Basilio Verduzco Planning and Public Policy 1996 Grant Saff Planning and Public Policy Paul Caris Geography 1995 Karen Lowrie Planning and Public Policy 1993 Allan Lichtenstein Planning and Public Policy Yvonne Wollenberg Political Science 1992 Andrew Herod Geography Don Mitchell Geography 1991 James Wiley Geography Sawsan Bakr Planning and Public Policy 1990 Jon Erickson Planning and Public Policy Alan Peters Planning and Public Policy Olivia Mitchell Geography 1989 Alex Schwartz Planning and Public Policy MA Committees Chaired: 2011 Rachel Sutton Geography 2007 Richard Nisa Geography 2006 HyunShin Yoon Geography 2002 Raysa Martinez Geography 1999 Mark Pendras Geography 1998 Meg Holden Geography 1997 James DeFilippis Geography

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1994 Curtis Freitag Geography Karen Nichols Geography 1990 Shira Birnbaum Geography 1987 Deborah Popper Geography Laura Reid Geography Tanya Steinberg Geography 1986 Helen Heinrich Geography PUBLIC SERVICE Keynote Address: “Civic Engagement in Camden, New Jersey,” CamConnect Camden Data Center Open House, Camden, NJ, December 2007. Invited Participant: Partners for Life: Building Sustainable Campus/Community Partnerships, New Jersey COPC Statewide Forum, Montclair State University, Montclair, NJ, May 2004. Invited Participant: Community-University Learning Initiative Planning Project Roundtable, Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, January 2004. Invited Participant: Community-University Learning Initiative Planning Project Roundtable, Milano Graduate School of Management and Urban Policy, The New School, New York, NY, December 2003. Invited Participant: ULI-The Urban Land Institute Mayors Forum, City and University Cooperation for Urban Revitalization, Columbus, OH, November 1999. Panel Member: Governor’s Conference on Housing and Community Development, Atlantic City, NJ, October 1999. Co-Chair: Conference on the State Plan and the Cities, Coalition for Affordable Housing and the Environment, New Brunswick, NJ, March 1999. Member: Technical Advisory Committee, New Jersey Future, 1997-98. Invited Participant: National Academy of Sciences, Board on Sustainable Development, Summer Study, Woods Hole, MA, July 1997. Participant: Sustainable State Leadership Conference, Governor’s Office of Policy and Planning, Princeton, New Jersey, May 1997. Keynote Speaker: “Four Myths of Locally Unwanted Land Use,” New Jersey Planning Officials, Totowa, NJ, January 1997. Document Review: Review of numerous drafts of “Proposed Voluntary Siting Plan for Locating a Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Facility in New Jersey,” for the New Jersey Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Siting Board, 1993-94.

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Keynote Speaker: “Removing Impediments to Fair Housing in Rockland County,” Rockland County Community Housing Resource Board Conference, Rockland County, NY, April 1994. Panel Member: Voluntary Siting Plan Workshop, New Jersey Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Facility Siting Board, Princeton, NJ, October 1993. Keynote Speaker: “Fair Housing is Drug-Free Housing,” Conference on Promoting Drug-Free Neighborhoods, Rockland County Community Housing Resource Board and the Rockland Community Partnership, Rockland County, NY, October, 1993. Panel Member: Discussion Group of Planning Professionals on the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Voluntary Siting Program, New Jersey Department of the Public Advocate, and the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Advisory Committee, Princeton, NJ, May 1993. Expert Testimony: Testimony before the New Jersey General Assembly Environment Committee concerning Bill A-190 prohibiting retaliatory law suits, February 1993. Presentation: “Siting Hazardous Waste Facilities Through Compensation and Incentives,” Regional Environmental Committee, Piemonte Region, Turin, Italy, December 1992. Panel Member: Roundtable Discussion, “Planning for Affordable Housing in the Connecticut/ New York/New Jersey Metropolitan Region,” Regional Plan Association, New York, June 1992. Presentation: “Testing in Fair Housing,” Fair Housing Assistance Program Training Conference, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Region II, New York, NY, July 1991. Presentation: “Hazardous Waste Facility Siting: The U.S. Experience,” Province of North Holland, Department of Environmental Protection, Haarlem, The Netherlands, June 1991. Member, Technical Program Committee, International Symposium on Hazardous Materials: Social Aspects of Facility Planning and Management, Toronto, Ontario, October 1990. Keynote Speaker: Rockland County Community Housing Resource Board Symposium on Fair and Affordable Housing, Rockland County, NY, April 1990. Panel Member: Review of Report on “Impact Mitigation and Compensation,” Center for Negotiation and Conflict Resolution, for the New Jersey Low Level Radioactive Waste Facility Siting Board, February 1990. Expert Witness: Housing Coalition of Middlesex County v. Woodbridge Terrace Associates, Inc. and Garden Apartment Management, Inc., United States District Court, District of New Jersey, CA #87-1081 HAA, 1990. Panel Member: “Impact Assessment Workshop,” Low Level Radioactive Waste Management Siting Task Force, Province of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, February 1989.

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Report: “Racial and Ethnic Clustering in Garden Apartment Developments, Middlesex County, NJ,” Housing Coalition of Middlesex County, August 1988. Presentation: “Retail Impacts of Television City: Lessons from Other Cities,” West Side Chamber of Commerce of New York City, Inc., January 1988. Panel Member: “Evaluating the Impact of Television City on West Side Retailing,” Public Forum, Community Board Seven, New York, NY, October 1987. Presentation: “Future Housing Trends in New Jersey,” New Jersey Division on Civil Rights and the New Jersey Real Estate Commission, Woodbridge, NJ, May 1985. Panel Member: “Infrastructure Policy Retreat,” Task Force on Infrastructure Renewal, Coalition of Northeastern Governors (CONEG) Policy Research Center, Inc., Princeton, NJ, Dec. 1983. Panel Member: Panel Discussion of the Proposed New Jersey Infrastructure Bank, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, July 1983. Presentation: “Towards an Approach to Measuring the Effectiveness of Community Housing Resource Boards,” National Community Housing Resource Board Pre-Conference Planning Workshop, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Washington, DC, Aug. 1982. Presentation: “Fair Housing: The National Perspective,” Housing Discrimination Training Conference, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Region II, Cherry Hill, NJ, July 1982. Panel Member: Conference on “A Place to Live: Housing Crisis in Middlesex County,” Middlesex County Department of Housing and Community Development, June 1980. Presentation: “Housing Search Experiences of Black and White Suburban Homebuyers,” Office of Policy Development and Research, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Washington, DC, December 1979. Panel Member: Conference on “Overcoming Housing Segregation in the New York Region,” Regional Plan Association, New York, NY, October 1979.

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SERVICE TO THE PROFESSION Editorial Board memberships Annals of the Association of American Geographers (1996 - 2000) Urban Geography (1984 - ) Advancing Critical Policy Studies book series, International Advisory Board, Edward Elgar (2016 - ) Leadership in Professional Associations American Association of Geographers (AAG) Nystrom Dissertation Award Committee (2014 - 2015) Nominating Committee (2012 - 2013) Annual Meeting Local Arrangements Committee (2011 - 2012) American Association of Geographers, Urban Geography Specialty Group Chair (1985-86); Acting Chair (1984-85) Board of Directors (1980-81; 1983-86) Chair, Policy Review Committee (1986-88) Chair, Nominating Committee (1986-87) Chair, Long-Range Planning Committee (1985-86) Chair, Annual Meeting Program Committee (1983-84) American Association of Geographers, Political Geography Specialty Group Board of Directors (1988-90). American Association of Geographers, Geographers Network on Politics in America Member, Steering Committee (1995-2000). Urban Affairs Association (UAA) Co-Chair, Committee on Compensation and Benefits (2012-2014) Member, Publications Committee (2004-2011; 2017-2018) Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP) Faculty, JPER Writing Workshop for New Scholars (2017) Faculty, JPER Writing Workshop for Junior Faculty (2016) Faculty Mentor (2013- ) Member, Annual Meeting Local Arrangements Committee (2014) Panel Member and Reviewer, ACSP PhD Workshop (2014) Mobile Tour Organizer, ACSP Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA (2014) External Program Reviews: Department of Geography, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, October 2017 MA Program in Global Urban Justice, University of Leeds, UK, August 2014 Master’s Program in Urban Studies, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada, October 2004 Department of Geography and Environmental Systems, University of Maryland, June 2004 Department of Geography, University of South Florida, November 2000

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Proposals Reviewed for: National Science Foundation, Geography and Regional Science Senior Review Panel (2002-2005) National Science Foundation – frequent proposal reviewer Geography and Regional Science Program Political Science Program Sociology Program Decision, Risk, and Management Science U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Russell Sage Foundation New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station Book Manuscripts/Proposals Reviewed for: Cornell University Press Blackwell Publishers, Ltd. MIT Press Edward Arnold Publishers, Ltd. Rutgers University Press Guilford Press, Inc. SUNY Press Oxford University Press Temple University Press Prentice-Hall, Inc. University College London Press Routledge, Ltd. University of Arizona Press Ashgate Publishers, Ltd. University of Chicago Press Stanford University Press University of Georgia Press Sage Publications University of Minnesota Press University of Wisconsin Press Journal Manuscripts Refereed for: Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Antipode, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, Critical Policy Studies, Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, Economic Geography, Environment and Planning-A, Environment and Planning-C, Environment and Planning-D: Society and Space, Environmental Science Policy, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Geoforum, Geojournal, Geographical Review, Geographical Systems, GeoHumanities, Growth and Change, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Journal of the American Planning Association, Journal of the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association, Journal of Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Policy Reform, Journal of Geography, Journal of Planning Education and Research, Journal of Planning Literature, Journal of Urban Affairs, Journal of Urban History, National Tax Journal, Planning Theory and Practice, Policy Studies Journal, Political Geography, Professional Geographer, Progress in Human Geography, Public Culture, Regional Studies, Social and Cultural Geography, Social Problems, Social Science Quarterly, Sociological Forum, Sociology and Social Research, Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, Urban Affairs Review, The Urban Interest, Urban Geography, Urban Studies

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UNIVERSITY AND DEPARTMENTAL SERVICE Rutgers University Member, International Advisory Committee, Graduate and Professional Education (2015 - 2016) Member, GAIA Centers Faculty Committee on Global Urbanism (2015 - 2017) Member, Graduate School-New Brunswick Teaching Award Committee (2015 - 2017) Member, Graduate School-New Brunswick Fulbright Faculty Committee (2013 - 2014) Member, Graduate School-New Brunswick Executive Council (2004 - 2007; 2009 - 2013) Graduate School Representative, New Brunswick Faculty Council (2004 - 2007) Bloustein School Representative, Rutgers University Senate (2003 - 2005) Faculty Grievance Committee (1996 - 1997; 1997 - 1998) Social Sciences Area Committee (1988 - 1990) Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy Graduate Director and Director of the Doctoral Program (2009 - 2015) Chair, EJBS Faculty Council (2006 - 2008) Member, Bloustein School Steering Committee (2006 - 2015) Co-Chair, Faculty Search Committee (2006 - 2007, 2007 - 2008) By-Laws Committee (2006 - 2008) Committee on Admissions, Recruitment & Scholastic Standing (2005 - 2007) Committee on Appointments and Promotions (2000 - 2001; 2010 - 2011) Strategic Planning Committee (2013-2014) TA Training (2011) Center for Urban Policy Research (CUPR) Acting Director (1997 - 1998) Associate Director (1998 - 2000) Director, CUPR Press (1989 - 2011) Faculty Search Committee (1991 - 2000) Search Committee, Director of CUPR (1987 - 1988) Graduate Program in Geography Executive Committee (1985 - 1990) Chair, Graduate Admissions Committee (1986 - 1990) Graduate Admissions Committee (1991 - 1995; 2000 - 2001; 2005 - 2007) Faculty Search Committee (1985 - 1988) Editor, Department of Geography Discussion Papers Series (1978 - 1988)