Minor Geographies & the Activist Mode of Existence
Institute on Inequality and Democracy at UCLA Luskin invites you to join Michele Lancione to explore how or if it is even it possible to be an 'activist' and a 'researcher' at the same time.
Institute on Inequality and Democracy at UCLA Luskin invites you to join Michele Lancione to explore how or if it is even it possible to be an 'activist' and a 'researcher' at the same time.
The California High-Speed Rail program is an ambitious, controversial, and troubled project. It could shape the future of transportation in California and it could fail.
The Senior Fellows Leadership Program kicks off another academic year with its annual invitation-only breakfast gathering.
Authors Nicolas Berggruen and Nathan Gardels will discuss their ideas for an alternative framework for governance during "Renovating Democracy: Governing in the Age of Globalization and Digital Capitalism."
Los Angeles lacks a natural harbor and yet San Pedro Bay grew into one of the world’s great ports.
Since 1909, chauffeur corporations—from the Taxicab Company to Uber—underwent formative re-organizations to shift the liabilities and responsibilities of business onto workers.
Organizers from Japan and Los Angeles will speak about policing and the rights of the unhoused, highlighting how the Olympics have impacted the poor in cities around the world.
The UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture presents "10 Questions," with Jennifer Ferro, Kevin Kane and Ananya Roy, who will join Victoria Marks to explore the question "What is Community?"
Cities have learned a lot from pilot projects in search of more effective tools to manage new private-sector transportation providers.
While private-mobility providers struggle to survive financially, they have nonetheless introduced many new innovations to improve mobility, reduce emissions, and even improve transportation equity.