UCLA Arrowhead Series: Mobility for Vulnerable Populations
UCLA Luskin Professor Evelyn Blumenberg of the Lewis Center joins other planning experts to discuss how the pandemic touches on and shapes the mobility of vulnerable populations.
UCLA Luskin Professor Evelyn Blumenberg of the Lewis Center joins other planning experts to discuss how the pandemic touches on and shapes the mobility of vulnerable populations.
Doctoral students are encouraged to attend this professional development series (presented by the departments of Social Welfare and Urban Planning). These three virtual workshops will provide tools to navigate the academic world, answer questions about doctoral expectations, and introduce pedagogical methods. RSVP links below. Session 1: The Academic Job Market & Navigating the Academy Session […]
As millions reduced their travel, what were the impacts to air quality, traffic crashes and individual mental health?
Political experts Steve Schmidt and Sarah Longwell will discuss what it's like to believe in and promote a conservative agenda in America even when you can't bring yourself to support Donald Trump as president.
How has travel behavior changed during the COVID-19 pandemic? How do changes in travel behavior and online shopping differ between income, race/ethnicity, and occupational class?
Join Asia Society Southern California for a discussion with Ambassadors John Emerson and Nina Hachigian for their perspectives on the future of the global economic order. The conversation will be moderated by former ASSC Executive Director and journalist, Jonathan Karp.
This is a great opportunity to engage with Luskin's Public Policy program on multiple levels and have some of your most pertinent questions get answered.
Join Dean Gary Segura, Sonja Diaz of the Latino Policy and Politics Initiative, Public Policy Professor Mark Peterson and Chad Dunn of the UCLA Voting Rights Project for a post-debate conversation.
The pandemic has significantly reduced transportation revenues from motor vehicle fuel taxes, tolls, transit fares, regulatory surcharges, and perhaps most importantly, general sales taxes.
Transit thrives on density, but the pandemic has upended that idea with density as the antithesis of public health measures to control the spread of COVID-19.