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Neal Richman
Biographical Synopsis
Neal Richman Ph.D. is
the Associate Director of the UCLA Advanced Policy Institute, the
center for community development outreach, training and technical
assistance within the new School of Public Policy and Social Research.
Since 1991, he has also been on the faculty of the UCLA Department
of Urban Planning with courses on such topics as non-profit development,
inner city retail revitalization, real estate and professional planning
practice. He received a doctoral degree for his cross-national research
on housing provision from the Department of Development and Planning
at the University of Aalborg in Denmark where he sometimes teaches
a module in planning ethics.
His professional background
is in the field of affordable housing development and management,
where he managed the rehabilitation/construction of more than one
thousand dwelling units in Southern California. Most of these projects
were designed as scattered-site, infill developments with the aim
of strengthening the fabric of distressed neighborhoods. His development
work has relied on expanding resident-controlled housing and broadening
opportunities for ownership by lower income households. His development
research clients have included organizations in Europe, Africa,
South America and the former Soviet Union. His housing development
projects have won awards from the National Endowment for the Arts,
Progressive Architecture magazine and the US State Department for
the UN International Year of Shelter for the Homeless.
Currently, as the Associate
Director of UCLA API, he has been exploring the use of new information
and communication technologies to support grassroots community development
initiatives. FannieMae Foundation, Microsoft Foundation, and the
National Telecommunications Information Agency are some of the primary
funders of his technology program. The Neighborhood Knowledge Los
Angeles (NKLA) internet site can be found at http://nkla.ucla.edu.
NKLA provides a tool to assist in pinpointing processes of urban
disinvestment and has been used by government agencies, non-profit
organizations and private developers to support inner city reinvestment
and physical improvements. The City of Los Angeles hired him and
the NKLA team to produce an entire electronic code enforcement system
that relies on the use of palm pilots by housing inspectors. More
than $50 million dollars in repairs and rehabilitation have been
completed under this activity. These online tools have been recognized
as outstanding examples of e-government/e-community by Forbes Magazine
and the Rutgers Center for Urban Policy Research.
Identifying sites for
inner city re-investment and redevelopment has been just part of
Dr. Richman’s work on supporting smart growth and halting further
metropolitan sprawl within the region. In partnership with the Southern
California Association of Governments (SCAG), Dr. Richman has also
been conducting training programs for government officials, and
representatives of private industry on how new technologies will
reshape urban development patterns and finance. This training program
conducted courses throughout the region on how to use information
to promote better development programming. He has produced a website
called "Housing Southern Californians" that can be found
under the Housing and Livable Places Section on the SCAG homepage
www.scag.ca.gov. This project contains an electronic calculator
that translates the anticipated population growth for the region
into fair-share allocations for local housing development with existing
cities. These targets are now being incorporated into local housing
elements and HUD-required consolidated plans.
With regard to community
planning, Dr. Richman is responsible for the first online electronic
tool for neighborhood asset mapping (I AM LA) Interactive Asset
Mapping for Los Angeles. Building on an electronic mapping platform,
community residents assisted through local youth were able to identify
and present online their local strengths and capacities in such
areas as culture, environment, housing, economic development, youth
programming etc. Low income communities provide an opportunity for
investment not because of their need for capital, but because they
are the home of many important resources, organizational, institutional
and cultural. This work can also be seen on the NKLA site http://nkla.ucla.edu
(Data and Maps).
One important outgrowth
of this work has been the construction of a new project to strength
the dispersed community of disabled people throughout the Los Angeles
area. This project is called LILA, Living Independently in Los Angeles,
http://lila.ucla.edu.
Disabled people with expert knowledge of resources for their community
are being hired as asset mappers to share their information. In
addition relevant municipal data bases, relating to such as curb
cuts, program resources, and accessibility information are being
incorporated on a special mapping platform designed specifically
for use by this community. According to the project, electronic
access needs to be a social right under ADA, in addition to physical
accessibility.
Although Dr. Richman is
mid-career, he has already had a profound effect in shaping the
field of community development, both in terms of his completed housing
projects, and increasingly his use of new information tools to promote
"smart growth" and "connected communities".
Book Chapters
and Research Monographs
"Internet-based Neighborhood
Information Systems: A Comparative Analysis." With Danny Krouk
and Bill Pitkin, under review for, Community Informatics: Enabling
Communities with Information and Communications Technologies, edited
by Gurstein, M., Idea Group: Hershey PA, 1999 (forthcoming).
"Beyond Public-Private
Partnerships: Community Development Corporations and Affordable
Housing Provision in the U.S.A." for Community Economic
Development: Rhetoric or Reality, edited by Alan Twelvetrees,
Aldershot: Avebury. 1998.
"From CRA to Community
Investment Entrepreneurship: National Policy-Making and the Decentralisation
of Financial Negotiation and Investment." For Credit and
New Entrepreneurs, edited by Udo Reifner and Jan Evers. Nomos
Verlagsgesellschaft; Baden-Baden, Germany, 1998
"The California Mutual
Housing Association: Organizational Innovation for Resident-Controlled
Affordable Housing." with Allan Heskin for Affordable Housing
and Urban Development in the U.S.: Learning from Failure and Success,
edited by Willem van Vliet, Sage Publications. 1996.
"From Cooperative to Social
Housing: The Transformation of the Third Sector in Denmark." for
The Hidden History of Cooperatives, edited by Allan David
Heskin and Jacqueline Leavitt. Davis, California: Cooperative Center
University of California. 1995.
A Menu of Inner City
Housing Development Strategies, Johannesberg, South Africa:
Urban Foundation of South Africa. 1993.
References
for Neal Richman
Denise Fairchild, Community
Development Technologies Center, Los Angeles, California Denfair@cdtech.org,
213-763-2520
Michael Bodaken, National
Housing Trust, Washington, DC, Mbodaken@nhtinc.org,
202-333-8931
Joe Carreras, Southern
California Association of Governments, Los Angeles, California Carreras@scag.ca.gov,
213-236-1856
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