120 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108-4977
United States
Suffolk University Law School
innovation, district, housing, Koontz, spatial segregation, cities, urban, urban innovation districts; territorial sustainability, spatial segregation avoidance by income and class in the provision of social housing
Warsaw, Poland, innovation, innovation district, global economy, economic competitiveness, metropolitan, metropolitan governance, regional, cities, municipalities, urban, urban development, urban sprawl, sustainability.
sharing economy, preemption, state, local, regulation, collaboration, intrastate, uniformity, extraterritorial, short-term rentals, ride sharing, state interest
regional, regionalism, governance, metropolitan, localism, local, city, suburban, sprawl, land use, environment, transportation, institutions, structure, equity
open space, green space, conservation, preservation, protection, infrastructure, regional, collaboration, fragmentation, network, urban, intergovernmental, governance, watershed, ecosystem, environment, climate
equity, public transit, transit-oriented development, bus rapid transit, spatial segregation, racial segregation, cities, urban, transportation, corridors
sprawl, smart growth, urban, suburban, metropolitan, region, regional, government, governance, representative, city, local, municipal, state, county, public, public authority, district, infrastructure, natural resource, land, water, air, plan, transportation, environment, open space, green space