The Human City

A Discussion with Joel Kotkin and Michael Lind

  • In-Person
  • Politics & Prose at Busboys and Poets
    1025 5th Street NW
    Washington, DC 20001
  • 6:30PM – 8:30PM EDT
the-human-city_image.jpeg

Around the globe, most new urban
development has adhered to similar tenets: tall structures, small units, and
high density. However, while contemporary urbanist beliefs favor high-density,
“pack-and-stack” strategies, surveys show that 80 percent of people
in the United States—and the majority of people in most other countries—would
rather live in a more “village-like” setting.

In his eighth book, The Human City: Urbanism for the Rest of Us,
Joel Kotkin, a presidential fellow in urban futures at Chapman University and
executive director of the Center for Opportunity Urbanism, challenges conventional
urban-planning wisdom and argues that in order to be truly sustainable, built
environments must reflect the preferences of most people—and families in
particular—even if that means encouraging lower-density, suburban development.

Please Join New America co-founder and
policy director of the Economic Growth program Michael Lind for a conversation
with the author as he argues for a new, flexible approach to urban planning that
is centered on human values and provides a diverse range of options.

A question-and-answer session and book
signing will follow the discussion. Follow the conversation on Twitter with @politics_prose and @busboysandpoets.

Participants:

Joel
Kotkin

Presidential Fellow, Urban Futures,
Chapman University

Executive Director, Center for
Opportunity Urbanism

Executive Editor, NewGeography.com

Michael
Lind

Co-founder and Fellow, New America

Policy Director, Economic Growth
Program

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