Boston

LOCAL NODE

URBAN Boston is focused on bringing researchers and community members together to work on mutual areas of interest including but not limited to health, housing, education, transportation, and the ability for community members to use diverse data sources and analytic methods to devise evidence-based interventions. Additionally, URBAN.Boston will continue to enhance its communications capabilities to connect the Boston community around engaged research and action.

URBAN Boston is hosted at UMASS Boston’s McCormack Graduate School, Department of Public Policy. For more information about URBAN Boston, please contact us:
University of Massachusetts Boston
McCormack Graduate School
Department of Public Policy
100 Morrissey Drive
Boston, MA 02125

Email URBAN.BOSTON at: urban.boston@umb.edu

Like URBAN.Boston on Facebook
Join URBAN.Boston on LinkedIn

In 2012-2013, URBAN.Boston focused on defining its potential capabilities for increasing research collaborations between academics and community members by first engaging in public discussions and increasing our network capacity both online and in person.  We also encouraged unfettered brainstorming about URBAN.Boston’s possibilities.  We coordinated many public meetings over the past year:

  • July 2012 – 1st exploratory meeting held at UMASS Boston, where over 40 community leaders and faculty members shared ideas of what URBAN.Boston could be
  • October 2012 – 2nd meeting held in partnership with the Massachusetts Smart Growth Alliance with over 40 attendees who discussed the issues that typically arise in collaborative research
  • December 2012 – 3rd public meeting held at the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative, convening over 60 participants engaging in conversation about how URBAN.Boston can help create a new kind of relationship between communities and academics
  • February 2013 – 4th public meeting at Viet-AID where over 50 attendees had an opportunity to meet new people in their fields of interest and discuss current policy issues affecting local neighborhoods
  • June 2013 – 5th public meeting with students, teachers, and others at the Boston Youth Organizing Project to discuss intersectional youth issues across the city including health, education, jobs, and safety and to identify existing data that may be relevant for collaborative research around these areas

Support for URBAN.Boston is provided by SAGE Publications, the Edward W. Hazen Foundation, and UMASS Boston.

There are currently over 200 participants in the URBAN.Boston network including members of local and statewide community groups, labor unions, think-tanks, academic institutions, government agencies, businesses, financial institutions, and other non-profits.

URBAN.Boston is led by a Planning Team comprised of diverse practitioners who are committed to building this emerging network. Current Planning Team members include:

Ina Anderson, Partnerships Director, Massachusetts Smart Growth Alliance

Neenah Estrella-Luna, Faculty Member, Doctorate in Law and Policy Program, Northeastern University

Soo Hong, Assistant Professor of Education, Wellesley College

Chien-Chi Huang, Founder and President of Board, Asian Women for Health and Program Director, Asian Breast Cancer Project

Michael Johnson, Associate Professor, Department of Public Policy and Public Affairs, McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies, Graduate Program Director, University of Massachusetts Boston

Patricia Krueger-Henney, Assistant Professor, College of Education and Human Development, Univeristy of Massachusetts Boston

Patricia Molina-Costa (MIT)

John Saltmarsh, Director, New England Resource Center for Higher Education, University of Massachusetts Boston

Mark R. Warren, Associate Professor, Department of Public Policy and Public Affairs, McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies, Graduate Program Director, University of Massachusetts Boston

John Wooding, Professor, Department of Political Science, UMass, Lowell at University of Massachusetts Lowell

Boston
anaantunes

Youth HUB Presentation

On December 4, 2014 the URBAN Boston node and the Millennium Ten Initiative hosted an event focused on the use of community-based data for measurable, breakthrough results.  One of highlights of the event was a presentation by YouthHUB.  The presentation slides can be found here! Image by Youth HUB

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Boston
anaantunes

Boston Community Based Data Event

On December 4, 2014 URBAN Boston and the Millennium Ten Initiative hosted an event focused on the use of community-based data for measurable, breakthrough results!  The event was held on from 6-8:30pm at the Black Box Theater at Codman Academy (14 Epping Street in Dorchester, MA).  One of the highlights of

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Boston
anaantunes

Tenure Track Public Policy Position

The Department of Public Policy and Public Affairs of the McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies at the University of Massachusetts Boston invites applications for a tenure-track mid-level assistant or associate professor, to begin September 1, 2015.  Review of applications will begin November 15 and continue until filled.

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Boston
anaantunes

RFP: Next Generation Engagement

The 2014 Lynton Colloquium on the Scholarship of Engagement was held on September 15, 2014, at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. Hosted by NERCHE and the Center for Engaged Democracy (CED) at Merrimack College, the Annual Lynton Colloquium launched a new research initiative aimed at studying key community engagement issues

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Boston
anaantunes

Job Opp at UMass Boston Gaston Institute

The Mauricio Gastón Institute for Latino Community Development and Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts Boston seeks an Associate Director for Research.  The Associate Director will initiate, develop and implement a research agenda in the field of education that leverages the expertise, skills and research interest of the institute by developing funding

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Boston
anaantunes

Report: Bringing Theory to Practice Seminar

This is a report of the Bringing Theory to Practice Seminar held on May 5, 2014 at UMass Boston.  The purpose of this seminar was to examine and explore a wide range of faculty rewards (including promotion criteria, awards, faculty development support, and policies at various levels) that provide incentives

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