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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Evaluating the benefits of neighborhood change

Bartik, Timothy J. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1982. / Funded under a Grant with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.--acknowledgements. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaf 271-277).
22

Shadow courts a study of informal dispute processing /

Harrington, Christine B. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1982. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 226-258).
23

Las asociaciones de vecinos

Berriatúa San Sebastián, Javier. January 1977 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral, derecho)--Universidad Complutense de Madrid. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 312-320).
24

An Experimental Approach Analyzing Who "Sees' Disorder When There is Nothing to "See": Understanding Variance of Perceptions via Personal Characteristics

January 2013 (has links)
abstract: Knowing that disorder is related to crime, it has become essential for criminologists to understand how and why certain individuals perceive disorder. Using data from the Perceptions of Neighborhood Disorder and Interpersonal Conflict Project, this study uses a fixed photograph of a neighborhood, to assess whether individuals "see" disorder cues. A final sample size of n=815 respondents were asked to indicate if they saw particular disorder cues in the photograph. The results show that certain personal characteristics do predict whether an individual sees disorder. Because of the experimental design, results are a product of the individual's personal characteristics, not of the respondent's neighborhood. These findings suggest that the perception of disorder is not as clear cut as once thought. Future research should explore what about these personal characteristics foster the perception of disorder when it is not present, as well as, how to fight disorder in neighborhoods when perception plays such a substantial role. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.S. Criminology and Criminal Justice 2013
25

The campus edge: Mediating university and context

January 2007 (has links)
Urban colleges and universities must balance their desire to expand with the necessity of extroversion, more fully acknowledging their role as agents of change in their communities. Rather than revolutionizing the entirety of whatever campus already exists, can one of the campus's neglected edges present an opportunity for expansion in a different way, creating a zone that exposes students to a larger social realm, provides the public with the full educational and cultural benefits of proximity to the university, and revitalizes a blighted area, while creating an identity of its own? The project transforms Tulane University's neglected, under-utilized S. Claiborne Avenue end not so much to create two "fronts" in the form of two completely defined and closed "bookends," but to counterbalance Tulane's compositionally closed, homogeneous 19th-century entrance to an academic enclave with a hybrid, heterogeneous early 21st century counterpart which plays a variety of economic, educational, and social roles within its context. / 0 / SPK / archives@tulane.edu
26

Implementing redevelopment strategies to increase housing in Biloxi's downtown

January 2014 (has links)
0 / SPK / specialcollections@tulane.edu
27

The Corner Market - Connecting the Past and Future Neighborhood

Nguyen, Katrina Trozado 18 September 2013 (has links)
The Corner Market on Columbia Pike and South Walter Reed Drive in Arlington, Virginia was to stand at the intersection of yesterday and tomorrow. It would knit together a neighborhood segmented by real estate development and economics. It would fill the cerebral need to connect, interact, and relate through the corporeal needs of nourishment, medicine, and shelter. The building of four functions, market, pharmacy, bakery, and housing, would complete the fourth corner of Walter Reed Drive and Columbia Pike. It would stand on a four-cornered site with four faces: the welcoming North, serene South, diligent East, and leisurely West. The joining of one side with another would be celebrated architecturally, creating moments of importance and delight. The Corner Market would speak for its citizens in a timeless language free from the assumptions of newness within an old fabric. It would say that the neighborhood meets at the corner. / Master of Architecture
28

Space Design for the ACITC Educational Technology Office Area Using a Workplace Neighborhood Concept

Zhu, Ping 25 April 1997 (has links)
Today, the workplace is undergoing dramatic changes, featuring increased team activities and informal interactions. The work place neighborhood is a design concept derived from a city planning theory that may solve the workplace design problems arising from these changes, and provided a focus for this project. The Educational Technology office area of the Advanced Communication and Information Technology Center (ACITC) possesses the features representing the general workplace tendency today. The purpose of this project was to develop a workplace neighborhood space prototype for this office area. This prototype will provide a work environment conducive to team efforts and informal interactions and a workplace neighborhood space model for future reference. The project had three design phases: design programming, design development, and design evaluation and revision. During the design programming, a survey questionnaire was distributed to all of the 12 Educational Technology employees and behavioral mapping observations were conducted. Then, a conceptual plan, a series of workplace space patterns and a floor plan were developed for the workplace neighborhood space prototype. Finally, computer models were prepared for three neighborhood units for design evaluation. The result of the design evaluation indicated that the concerns between individual and group work spaces were not solved. The space prototype was revised, and a computer model of the revised space prototype was prepared. The revised space prototype met the work patterns of the employees more closely and reflected the design concept of workplace neighborhood more clearly / Master of Science
29

Neighborhood activism in sociohistorical perspective : Columbus, Ohio, 1900-1980 /

Sutcliffe, Michael O. January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
30

Evolving the Suburbs

O'Hara II, John Thomas 29 June 2018 (has links)
The single family home is a building type synonymous with residential architecture among many in the United States. The notion that the ideal built character of a dwelling is a private structure, built on private land, and owned by a private entity is as old as that ownership equating to power in human history. Though the houses of today are no longer the literal manifestations of strength seen in the fortifications of feudal castles or wealth seen in the opulence of imperial palaces, the metaphorical implications remain. It was on these allegories that the Post-WWII housing boom capitalized, using slogans and advertisements meant to invoke the glory and strength of owning a home. They charged that a man was not truly a man until he owned his own home, and that this American Dream can be achieved for surprisingly low prices. Thus the home was commoditized and development after development of ‘single family homes’ were replicated across the country. 70 years later, these structures which were built quickly for cost efficiency, and with a very specific ‘single family’ in mind for their residents are reaching the end of their usable lives. The architecture which replaces or adds to them has significant power to redefine the notion of a single-family home and its surrounding neighborhood. This thesis seeks to understand the current trend of redevelopment in these areas and propose alternate solutions which enrich the built character of the community and expands on the notion of what residential architecture can be. / Master of Architecture

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