Build Your Network. And Your Knowledge
The Color of Law: Part II
Date: Friday, April 16, 2021
Time: 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm April 16, 2021 (America/Chicago)
Location: Zoom
Price (per member):
Free to attend but must register to receive the Zoom link.
Attendees: This event is open to All LAI members globally.
As part of LAI’s 90th Anniversary project, we will explore the history of LAI and racial justice in land economics. Inspired by the book club of our Minnesota Chapter, the Global Chapter of LAI is planning a three-part series around the themes set in The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America by Richard Rothstein.
The Color of Law: Part II
Our Public Housing Legacy –
Challenging or Perpetuating Segregation in Our Cities? – What History Tells Us!
This 2nd program in the “COLOR OF LAW” series by LAI examines how our nation’s post-war federal public housing construction program impacted – for good or bad – racial segregation in American cities.
The 1st program threw new light on underwriting and FHA policies supporting segregation. This program turns to federal policy in cities.
Please join us for a discussion with:
![]() Joe Nathanson – ModeratorMr. Josef Nathanson is the retired principal of Urban Information Associates, organized to provide economic development and economic/ demographic consulting services. Mr. Nathanson, a resident of Philadelphia’s public housing in his early years, holds a master's degree in City and Regional Planning from the University of Pennsylvania. He earned his undergraduate degree in architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has been a member of Lambda Alpha International since 1992 and served three years as president of the Baltimore chapter (1997-2000). In recent years, Mr. Nathanson led consulting assignments relating to commercial revitalization, economic impact studies and workforce housing. Several studies involved meeting with and documenting the experiences of immigrant and refugee communities in Atlanta, Buffalo, and several places in Maryland. In 2003, he served as an expert witness in the landmark case, Thompson v. HUD, dealing with racially segregated public housing in Baltimore. As Director of MetroResearch for the Baltimore Metropolitan Council (1992 -2002), Mr. Nathanson had overall management responsibility for the metropolitan planning agency's program of socioeconomic research.
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Extra-credit homework: See LAI’s history timeline to learn more about Richard T. Ely and Homer Hoyt and their relationships to LAI. https://lai.org/about/history