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Chester W. Hartman (-2023) is an American
urban planner , author, and academic. He is Director of Research of the Poverty & Race Research Action Council (PRRAC) in
Washington, D.C. Previously, he was PRRAC's Executive Director. He is also a Fellow of the
Institute for Policy Studies in Washington and the Transnational Institute in Amsterdam as well as founder and former chair of the Planners Network, a national organization of progressive planners and
community organizers . He has served on the faculty of
Harvard University ,
Yale University , the
University of North Carolina ,
Cornell University , the
University of California, Berkeley ,
George Washington University ,
Columbia University ,
[1] and, most recently, the
University of Massachusetts, Boston .
[2]
Hartman serves or has served on the Editorial Boards of the
Journal of Negro Education ,
Journal of Urban Affairs , Housing Policy Debate ,
Urban Affairs Quarterly , Housing Studies , and the National Low Income Housing Coalition, of which he is former Secretary.
[3]
He has served as a consultant to numerous public and private agencies, including the
United States Department of Housing and Urban Development , the
United States Commission on Civil Rights , Stanford Research Institute (now named
SRI International ),
Arthur D. Little ,
California Rural Legal Assistance , the Urban Coalition, the
California Department of Housing and Community Development , and the
Legal Aid Society of New York.
[4]
Education
Hartman holds a Ph.D. in
City and Regional Planning from
Harvard University .
[5]
Selected publications
1973: Housing Urban America , Aldine, 1973 (rev. ed 1980), with Jon Pynoos and Robert Schafer.
1973: The World of the Urban Working Class , contributor,
Harvard University Press , 1973, with Marc Fried (author), Ellen Fitzgerald, Peggy Gleicher, and Edwina Nary Bentz.
1974: Yerba Buena: Land Grab and Community Resistance in San Francisco , Glide, 1974.
1975: Housing and Social Policy ,
Prentice Hall , 1975.
1982: Displacement: How to Fight It , National Housing Law Project, 1982, with William Dennis Keating and Richard T. LeGates.
1983: America's Housing Crisis: What Is To Be Done? ,
Routledge & Kegan Paul , 1983.
1984: The Transformation of San Francisco , Rowman and Allanheld, 1984.
1986: Critical Perspectives on Housing , editor,
Temple University , 1986, with Rachael G. Bratt (editor) and Ann Meyerson (editor).
1988: Winning America: Ideas & Leadership for the 1990s , editor,
South End Press , 1988, with
Marcus Raskin (editor).
1989: Housing Issues of the 1990s ,
Praeger , 1989, with Sara Rosenberry.
1992: Paradigms Lost: The Post Cold War Era ,
Pluto Press , 1992, with Pedro Villanova (editor).
1997: Double Exposure: Poverty and Race in America ,
M.E. Sharpe , 1997.
2001: Challenges to Equality: Poverty & Race in America , M.E. Sharpe, 2001.
2002: Between Eminence & Notoriety: Four Decades of Radical Urban Planning ,
Rutgers University
Center for Urban Policy Research , 2002, with
Jane Jacobs (foreword).
2002: City for Sale: The Transformation of San Francisco ,
University of California Press , 2002.
2006: The Right to Housing: Foundation of a New Social Agenda , Temple University, 2006.
ISBN
1-59213-432-7
2006: Poverty & Race in America: The Emerging Agendas , Lexington Books, 2006, with
Eric Foner ,
Jesse Jackson Jr. , etc.
2006: There Is No Such Thing As a Natural Disaster: Race, Class &
Hurricane Katrina ,
Routledge , 2006, with Gregory Squires.
2009: Mandate for Change: Policies and Leadership for 2009 and Beyond ,
Lexington Books , 2009, with Catherine Albisa, etc.
2010: The Integration Debate: Competing Futures for American Cities ,
Routledge , 2010, with Gregory Squires
2010: "Steps Toward a Just Metropolis," in What We See: Advancing the Observations of Jane Jacobs ,
New Village , 2010, pp. 167–175.
2013: From Foreclosure to Fair Lending , New Village, 2013, with Gregory Squires.
References
International National Artists Other