Homelessness in LA

Housing, Equity and Community Series 2017-2018 HOMELESSNESS IN LA This event explored the issue of homelessness and the response of local institutions from three different perspectives: a Skid Row resident and activist, a developer of permanent supportive housing, and UCLA’s own Bruin Shelter. Read More

Public Transportation and #MeToo

Room 2355 Public Affairs Building 337 Charles E Young Dr., LOS ANGELES, CA, United States

Transportation is a Women’s Issue I PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AND #METOO Struggling to reach for a strap on a crowded bus. Stepping into a packed train car and looking for a small space of refuge. Waiting by yourself at a dark bus stop. Trying to run household serving errands on a public transit

Protecting Renters

Room 2355 Public Affairs Building 337 Charles E Young Dr., LOS ANGELES, CA, United States

Housing, Equity and Community Series 2017-2018 PROTECTING RENTERS: DISCUSSIONS OF RENT CONTROL, STABILIZATION AND EVICTIONS California’s housing crisis is hitting renters hard. With rents fast increasing in Los Angeles, many people are scared. Whether they fear rent increases that push housing costs out of reach or being scared that improvements to the

A Gendered Planning Mismatch

Room 2355 Public Affairs Building 337 Charles E Young Dr., LOS ANGELES, CA, United States

Transportation is a Women’s Issue II A GENDERED PLANNING MISMATCH How do discussions and plans for the future of transportation and new innovative mobility services account for women’s travel patterns? Women tend to commute shorter distances and conduct more household serving trips than their male counterparts. This gender gap exists even in

The South LA Home Ownership Crisis

Room 2355 Public Affairs Building 337 Charles E Young Dr., LOS ANGELES, CA, United States

Housing, Equity and Community Series 2017-2018 THE SOUTH LA HOME OWNERSHIP CRISIS Discrimination in the housing market was legal in California until the 1968 Federal Fair Housing Act, which finally upheld the state’s frustrated efforts to legislate equal access in 1963. Legalized discrimination and segregation led to highly unequal housing outcomes between

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