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Events
Climate and Energy Security – A Strategic National Security issue February 02, 2012 / Warsaw, Poland

On January 31, 2012 the GMF Warsaw office hosted British Climate and Energy Security Envoy Rear Admiral Neil Morisetti for a discussion on the implications of  climate change on national and global security.

Audio
In 8 Minutes or Less: The Politics of Pipelines February 01, 2012

“Instead of the Keystone XL Pipeline being about cheaper access to oil for all Americans, it became about better access for some and more expensive access for others.”

Audio
In 8 Minutes or Less: What Role Could Shale Gas Play in Europe’s Energy Puzzle? January 30, 2012

"Shale gas has seen major technological developments in recent years".

Cities in Transition


A sustainable network for leaders from Flint, Detroit, Cleveland, Youngstown, and Pittsburgh supported by the Surdna Foundation and the Kresge Foundation and organized by the German Marshall Fund of the United States

Project Summary

The Cities in Transition Initiative is a three-year project designed to build a sustained network of leading policymakers and practitioners in five older industrial U.S. cities: Detroit and Flint, Michigan; Cleveland and Youngstown, Ohio; and the greater Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania region. 

Through three annual study tours supplemented by series of working meetings and policy workshops, participants in this network work together closely to articulate critical policy challenges facing their communities and to identify ways to adapt innovative solutions that European older industrial cities have implemented to address the myriad challenges associated with urban disinvestment and economic restructuring. In each of its three years, the project will zero in on a different policy area affecting these cities.

Year One (2010-11): Shrinking Cities – Land Use and Vacant Properties

In 2010-2011, the Cities in Transition Initiative focused on the challenges that arise from physical transformations occurring in a built environment that has been left behind by rapidly shifting settlement patterns. In cities in the United States’ Rust Belt and elsewhere, trends of decreasing population and suburbanization have sapped the vibrancy of many core city neighborhoods, leaving them vulnerable to blight and not dense enough to support a healthy civic life. 

Year One Study Tour to Leipzig and Manchester
In December 2010, GMF led a delegation of representatives from the five U.S. cities and from the U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development on a trip to Leipzig and Manchester, each of which has implemented successful strategies to bring population and life back to its urban core.
Read more and view presentations

Youngstown Workshop
In June 2011, GMF hosted a workshop bringing together key leaders in Youngstown to discuss best practices in linking community and economic development and to explore the possibility of Youngstown developing a similar strategy. 

Cleveland Workshop
In July 2011, GMF convened Year One and Year Two participants for a workshop in Cleveland. The workshop served as an opportunity both to deepen the conversation on key themes from the Year One study tour and to brainstorm on key questions for the Year Two study tour, with an eye toward understanding the linkages between the two years.
Read more

Year Two (2011-12): Economic Development – Regional Strategies and Placemaking

In 2011-2012, the Cities in Transition project focuses on regional approaches to economic development and will explore their relationship to place-based strategies – that is, strategies that capitalize on a place’s unique assets and that envision economic and community development as two parts of a single process. Programming explores whether and how European cities have developed regional approaches to economic redevelopment and linked these approaches with community and economic revitalization efforts in core cities. 

Year Two Study Tour to the Ruhr and Barcelona
In September 2011, GMF led a delegation from the five U.S. cities, the White House, and the U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development on a trip to the Ruhr region of Germany, to study its approaches to building regional cohesion around economic growth; and to Barcelona, Spain, to focus on neighborhood-scale revitalization around the 22@Barcelona project.

Summary and materials coming soon