Content
August 2021, Volume 15, Issue 2
- 132-132 Fintech, Racial Equity, and an Inclusive Financial System
by Rocio Sanchez-Moyano & Bina Shrimali
May 2021, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 152-152 Understanding Community Development Financial Institutions and their Impact in Low- and Moderate-Income Neighborhoods
by Ian Galloway & Rocio Sanchez-Moyano
2019, Issue 02
2019, Issue 01
- 05-05 Foreword to Community Development Innovation Review, Volume 14, Issue 1, 2019
by Ian Galloway
2018, Issue 1
- 04-04 Foreword to Community Development Innovation Review, Volume 13, Issue 1, 2018
by Laura Choi - 05-12 Moving Upstream to Promote Mental Health: The Role of Community Development
by Laura Choi - 13-20 The Mental Health Imperative: Learning from History and Innovating Forward
by Ben Miller & Tyler Norris - 21-31 Catalyzing Community Action for Mental Health and Wellbeing
by Larissa J. Estes & Sheila B. Savannah - 33-39 Widening Our Health Lens: Incorporating Trauma-Informed Practice into Affordable Housing
by Ashlei Hurst & Doug Shoemaker - 41-49 Arts, Culture, and Community Mental Health
by Tasha Golden & Jamie Hand - 51-60 Community Development and Accountable Communities for Health: New Opportunities for Mental Health Promotion
by Nathaniel Z. Coats & Paul Gionfriddo - 61-67 Equitable Community Development for Good Mental Health: A Discussion of Economic and Racial Equity in Housing
by Dayna Bowen Matthew - 69-80 Mental Health, Climate Change, and Community Development: Strengthening Core Capabilities to Promote Community Resilience
by Linda Helland & Margaret Walkover - 81-90 Building a Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral Health “Community of Solution” in Rural Colorado
by Maret Felzien & Jack M. Westfall & Linda Zittleman
2017, Issue 1
- 005-010 The What Works Book Sparked an Ongoing Conversation about Better Interventions for Low-Income Communities
by David J. Erickson - 011-014 A Hole in Our Vision: Race, Gender and Justice in Community Development
by Nancy O. Andrews - 015-020 Reflecting on What Works: Disruptive Leaders Are Essential
by Carol Naughton - 021-025 How Collaboration Drives Community Development Innovation in Los Angeles
by Helmi Hisserich - 027-033 Building on the Ambitions and Aspirations of Newcomers
by Angela Blanchard - 035-042 Sparking Change in New England’s Smaller Cities: Lessons from Early Rounds of the Working Cities Challenge
by Kseniya Benderskaya & Colleen Dawicki - 043-051 The SPARCC Initiative: Fostering Racial Equity, Health, and Climate Resilience in the Built Environment
by Chris Kabel & Amy Kenyon & Sharon Z. Roerty - 053-061 Sustainable Little Tokyo: Resisting Gentrification and Displacement Through Holistic Community Engagement and Development
by Josh Ishimatsu & Dean Matsubayashi - 063-072 Rural CDFIs Give Voice to a Brighter Future in Rural Regions
by Betsy Biemann & Keith Bisson - 073-080 The Role of Community Development in Supporting People in Reentry from Prison
by Mark A. Hake & Lena Robinson - 081-092 The Evolution and Future of the Healthy Communities Movement
by Renee Roy Elias & Alison Moore - 093-097 Building on What Works and Investing in Progress
by Brandee McHale - 099-108 Partners In Progress Case Study: BRIDGE Housing
by Carl Sussman & John Weiser - 109-116 Partners in Progress Case Study: CASA
by Carl Sussman & John Weiser - 117-123 Partners In Progress Case Study: Community Solutions
by Carl Sussman & John Weiser - 125-132 Partners in Progress Case Study: East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation
by Carl Sussman & John Weiser - 133-141 Partners in Progress Case Study: Fairfield County Community Foundation
by Rachel Bluestein & Matthew Singh - 143-152 Partners in Progress Case Study: Neighborhood Housing Services of South Florida
by Carl Sussman & John Weiser
2016, Issue 01
- 001-007 The Middle Neighborhood Movement, 1970-2000
by Paul C. Brophy & Joe McNeely - 008-020 The Case for Intervention in Middle Neighborhoods
by George Galster - 021-045 Demographics and Characteristics of Middle Neighborhoods in Select Legacy Cities
by Ira Goldstein & Jacob L. Rosch & William Schrecker - 046-062 Is the Urban Middle Neighborhood an Endangered Species? Multiple Challenges and Difficult Answers
by Alan Mallach - 063-083 Homeownership and the Stability of Middle Neighborhoods
by Alan Mallach - 084-099 Strategies to Improve Middle Neighborhoods
by David Boehlke - 100-116 Using Place Branding Strategy to Create Homebuyer Demand for Legacy City Neighborhoods
by Marcia Nedland - 117-126 The Healthy Neighborhoods Program: A Middle Neighborhoods Improvement Strategy
by Darlene Russell & Mark Sissman - 127-140 Understanding Middle Market Neighborhoods as Vital Parts of Regional Economies
by Robert Weissbourd - 141-144 Rebuilding from Strength as a Strategy to Safeguard Middle Neighborhoods in Detroit: A Philanthropic Perspective
by Wendy Jackson - 145-156 Local Public Policy and Middle Neighborhoods
by Henry S. Webber - 157-176 Preservation in Middle Neighborhoods: Promising Results in Ohio
by Cara Bertron & Nicholas Hamilton
2014, Issue 02
- 005-009 Opportunity at the intersection of community development and creative placemaking
by Ben Hecht - 011-016 Creative placemaking: an interview with the Ford Foundation
by Xavier de Souza Briggs & Laura Callanan & Darren Walker - 017-023 Five roles for arts, culture, and design in economic development
by Mary Jo Waits - 025-030 Arts for the City: community arts and affordability innovations in San Francisco
by Tom DeCaigny & Edwin M. Lee - 031-034 The meaning of the creative economy in Los Angeles
by Samuel Hoi - 035-042 Creative placemaking: how to do it well
by Ann Markusen & Anne Gadwa Nicodemus - 043-048 Measuring the economic and social impacts of cultural organizations
by Stephen Sheppard - 049-055 Assessing a set of indicators for creative placemaking: reflections from the field
by Elaine Morley & Mary K. Winkler - 057-063 Financing creative places
by Gary Hattem - 065-071 Our town: supporting the arts in communities throughout the United States
by Jane Chu & Jason Schupbach - 073-075 Arts and culture in Detroit: central to our past and our future
by Rip Rapson - 077-084 Creative placemaking in community planning and development: an introduction to ArtPlace America
by Jamie Bennett - 085-100 Strengthening economic development
by Kimberly Driggins & Jodi Farrell & Michael Forsyth & Ana Morgenstern & Laura Zabel - 101-115 Seeding civic engagement
by Jim Lasko & Lori Lobenstine & Tracy Taft & Julia Taylor - 116-130 Building resiliency
by Nancy Barton & Nicole Crutchfield & Lisa Hoffman & Laetitia Wolff - 131-144 Contributing to quality of life
by Bruce Farnsworth & Prema Gupta & Marilyn Higgins & Joseph Kunkel
2014, Issue 01
- 005-010 Mixing asset building with energy efficiency: a recipe for financial and environmental sustainability
by Andrea Levere - 013-021 The future of the clean (green) economy
by Denise G. Fairchild - 023-026 Cleaner energy and health: household, local and global benefits
by Dana Bourland & Yianice Hernandez - 027-034 Financing energy efficiency retrofits of affordable multifamily buildings
by Anne Evens & John G. (Jack) Markowski & Matt Schwartz - 035-042 Manufactured homes help both save the planet and save money for low-income owners
by Stacey Epperson & Doug Ryan - 043-052 Utilities and community developers partner to improve the energy efficiency of affordable rental housing nationwide
by Michael Bodaken & Todd Nedwick - 053-061 Integrating energy efficiency into mortgage financing: promising efforts in the New York City multifamily building sector
by Sam Marks - 063-069 Home energy efficiency and mortgage risks: an extended abstract
by Nikhil Kaza & Roberto Quercia & Robert J. Sahadi - 071-083 Charter schools ripe for green investments
by Kim Dempsey & Jennifer Afdahl Rice - 085-090 Financing energy efficiency in low-income multifamily rental housing: a progress update from the Low Income Investment Fund
by Nancy O. Andrews & Dan Rinzler - 091-101 Neighborhood health: a new framework for investing in sustainable communities
by Maggie Super Church - 103-107 Bringing down green financing costs: how a state-sponsored bank might be the key
by Richard L. Kauffman - 109-116 Understanding the true benefits of both energy efficiency and job creation
by Casey Bell - 117-120 Can cities lead the way in innovative energy retrofits for single-family homes?
by Dorian Dale & Will Schweiger - 123-136 Lenders’ property standards and energy efficiency: the vital link for affordable housing`
by Philip Henderson - 137-146 Energy to heal: health care, climate change, and community resilience
by Gary Cohen & Robin Guenther
2013, Issue 02
- 05-06 Innovative strategies for mitigating the foreclosure crisis and stabilizing communities
by Thomas Bledsoe & Brandee McHale - 07-14 Policy lessons from the Neighborhood Stabilization Innovations Initiative
by John O'Callaghan & Paul Weech - 15-28 Targeted neighborhood stabilization: lessons in resilience in weak market cities
by Rob Curry & Kate Monter Durban & Sarah Page - 29-41 Scaling social enterprises: flexible responses for neighborhood stabilization
by Michael Bodaken & Elyse Cherry & Cindy Holler - 43-51 Rethinking tenure: building a diverse landscape of affordable housing options
by Joan Carty & Barbara McCormick & Tayani Suma - 53-61 Strengthening neighborhood stabilization: refining business models for housing counseling
by Danielle Samalin - 63-66 The Federal Housing Administration’s Distressed Asset Stabilization Program: an innovative solution for addressing the national and local impacts of the recession
by Carol Galante - 67-72 Reflections on the crisis: the need for public sector entrepreneurialism
by Mercedes Márquez - 73-80 Affirmatively furthering fair housing in REO-to-Rental programs
by Diane Glauber & Philip Tegeler - 81-86 Foreclosure recovery: the work that remains
by Paul Staley
2013, Issue 01
- 005-011 The real revolution of Pay for Success: ending 40 years of stagnant results for communities
by George Overholser & Caroline Whistler - 013-018 Pay for Success is not a panacea
by Daniel Stid - 019-022 The promise of Pay for Success
by Annie Donovan & Jonathan Greenblatt - 023-033 Social impact bonds: lessons learned so far
by Hanna Azemati & Michael Belinsky & Ryan Gillette & Jeffrey B. Liebman & Alina Sellman & Angela Wyse - 035-039 Pay for Success: understanding the risk trade-offs
by Kristin Giantris & Bill Pinakiewicz - 041-046 The ethics of Pay for Success
by Jodi Halpern & Douglas Jutte - 047-055 Learning from the Low Income Housing Tax Credit: Building a new social investment model
by Barry Zigas - 057-062 Using social impact bonds to spur innovation, knowledge building, and accountability
by Dan Bloom & David Butler & Timothy Rudd - 063-067 Social impact bonds: Using impact investment to expand effective social programs
by Tracy Palandjian & Luther Ragin - 075-078 Innovation needs foundation support: the case of Social Impact Bonds
by Joseph Kippy - 079-084 Pay for Success: opportunities and risks for nonprofits
by Laura Callanan & Jonathan Law - 085-089 Success begins with a feasibility study
by Robert H. Dugger - 091-096 Government’s role in Pay for Success
by Kristina Costa & Sonal Shah - 097-101 Rikers Island: the first Social Impact Bond in the United States
by John Olson & Andrea Phillips - 103-108 Human Capital Performance Bonds
by Steve Rothschild - 109-113 Pay for Success: building on 25 years of experience with the Low Income Housing Tax Credit
by Terri Ludwig - 115-125 Can Pay for Success reduce asthma emergencies and reset a broken health care system?
by Rick Brush - 127-130 Supporting at-risk youth: a provider’s perspective on Pay for Success
by Lili Elkins - 131-134 Tax increment finance: a success-driven tool for catalyzing economic development and social transformation
by Toby Rittner - 135-138 Bringing success to scale: Pay for Success and housing homeless individuals in Massachusetts
by Joe Finn & Jeff Hayward - 139-145 Making Performance-Based Contracting work for kids and families
by Jessica Foster & Patrick Lawler
2011, Issue 02
- 26-34 Metrics matter: A human development approach to measuring social impact
by Sarah Burd-Sharps & Patrick Guyer & Kristen Lewis - 35-42 Including the beneficiary voice: the success measures experience
by Margaret Grieve & Deborah Visser - 43-47 What would Google do? designing appropriate social impact measurement systems
by Lester M. Salamon - 48-52 "Impact Investing": theory, meet practice
by Mark Pinsky - 53-59 Solidifying the business case for CDFI nonfinancial performance measurement
by Ben Thornley - 60-62 Opportunity data: the other half of the information equation
by Laura Sparks - 63-70 The crisis’ silver lining: impact accounting penetrates the mainstream
by Sara Olsen
2011, Issue 01
- 002-011 Global agricultural value chains: sustainable growth as a means for sustainable development
by Patricia Lee Devaney - 012-027 International housing partnership exchange
by Thomas A. Bledsoe & Paul Weech - 028-041 Catalyzing American retail investment in community development finance: What can we learn from other SRI success stories?
by Caroline Bressan & Eliza M. Erikson - 042-057 Unlocking local capital for development: Shared Interest’s guarantee fund for South Africa
by Donna Katzin & Robert Rosenbloom - 058-070 Translating plain English: can the Peterborough Social Impact Bond construct apply stateside?
by Drew von Glahn & Caroline Whistler - 071-113 Learning social metrics from international development
by Paul Veldman - 114-118 The latest frontiers for financial inclusion: Using mobile phones to reach the unbanked
by Tillman Bruett - 119-133 CRA goes global: a good idea in the United States could use a makeover and a bigger audience
by David A. Smith - 134-140 Why Latin America urgently needs CRA, and why CRA won't work for Latin America
by Tova Maria Solo - 141-149 Using the framework of the Community Reinvestment Act to support rural communities in China
by Prabal Chakrabarti
2010, Issue 01
- 01-46 Building scale in community impact investing through nonfinancial performance measurement
by Colby Dailey & Ben Thornley - 47-49 Making the case for social metrics and impact investing
by Margot Brandenburg - 50-54 CRA modernization and impact investments
by John Moon - 55-56 Impact with punch: the perfect is the enemy of the good
by Arjan Schutte - 57-58 Who cares about social impact?
by Penelope Douglas - 59-63 Social metrics in investing: the future depends on financial outperformance and leadership
by Allison Duncan & Georgette Wong - 64-68 Investing for good: measuring nonfinancial performance
by David C. Colby & Sarah G. Pickell - 69-72 A role for the Feds? the opportunities and challenges in a federal government role in measuring and defining social impact in the impact investing field
by Sameera Fazili
2009, Issue 3
- 001-013 The importance of community development for health and well-being
by Miranda L. Ritterman & S. Leonard Syme - 014-046 Prescription for healthy communities: community development finance
by Lisa Richter - 047-065 Coming out as a human capitalist: community development at the nexus of people and place
by Nancy O. Andrews & Christopher Kramer - 066-074 Community health centers: a vital strategy for community development
by Annie Donovan & Scott Sporte - 075-087 Building healthy communities through equitable food access
by Judith Bell & Marion Standish - 088-096 The disability housing market: opportunity for community development finance as the Americans with Disabilities Act turns 20
by Samantha Bennett & Charles D. Hammerman - 097-103 The small business perspective on health-care reform
by Allison Kelly & Kirsten Snow Spalding - 104-119 The cash market in health care: a community-based approach
by Joy Anderson & Andrew Greenblatt - 120-122 Financial stress and its physical effects on individuals and communities
by Laura Choi - 123-127 The relevance of health reform to community health and development
by Neal Halfon & Peter Long
2009, Issue 2
- 01-06 Mission insurance: how to structure a social enterprise so its social and environmental goals survive into the future
by Kevin Jones - 07-17 Exploring the continuum of social and financial returns: when does a nonprofit become a social enterprise?
by Kathy O. Brozek - 18-29 Using high-transparency banks to reconnect money and meaning
by Bruce Cahan - 30-41 Impact investing: harnessing capital markets to solve problems at scale
by Antony Bugg-Levine & John Goldstein - 43-64 Increasing access to capital: could better measurement of social and environmental outcomes entice more institutional investment capital into underserved communities?
by Lisa A. Hagerman & Janneke Ratcliffe - 65-75 NCIF social performance metrics:increasing the flow of investments in distressed neighborhoods through community development banking institutions
by Saurabh Narain & Joseph Schmidt
2009, Issue 1
- 01-06 Confronting the “second wave of the tsunami”: stabilizing communities in the wake of foreclosures
by Carolina Reid - 07-42 The accumulation of foreclosed properties: trajectories of metropolitan REO inventories during the 2007–2008 mortgage crisis
by Daniel Immergluck - 43-52 Learning from the past: the asset disposition experiences of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, The Resolution Trust Corporation, and the Asset Control Area Program
by Andrew Jakabovics & Ellen Seidman - 53-64 Community development financial expertise put in service of neighborhood stabilization
by Mary Tingerthal - 65-72 Massachusetts’ efforts to address foreclosed properties
by Prabal Chakrabarti - 73-75 Community land trusts work in the best and worst of times
by Tina Brooks - 76-82 Using new markets tax credits to mitigate the impact of foreclosures on communities
by Anna Steiger
2007, Issue 2
- 01-07 By the numbers: Data and measurement in community economic development
by Ben S. Bernanke - 08-15 Can capital markets replace banks for funding community development?
by Richard K. Green - 16-33 Hunting for data sources: how improving data can increase capital for emerging domestic markets
by Jill Manning & Glenn Yago & Betsy Zeidman - 34-43 Standard & Poor’s Small Business Portfolio Model introduces a potential new tool for community development loan risk analysis
by Winston Chang & Weili Chen - 44-50 Cows, Kiva, and Prosper.Com: how disintermediation and the internet are changing microfinance
by Tillman Bruett - 51-59 First mover: the CDFI fund’s CIIS database holds promise to create substantial data repository for community development investments
by Heidi A. Kaplan - 60-63 Creating a marketplace: information exchange and the secondary market for community development loans
by Laura Choi - 64-75 Count what counts: improving charitable investor access to the community development sector with better data and better analytical models
by Lori Bamberger & Cort Gross
2007, Issue 1
- 1-22 A history of emerging domestic markets
by Alethea Abuyuan & Glenn Yago & Betsy Zeidman - 23-37 Who’s counting? Measuring social outcomes from targeted private equity
by Janneke Ratcliffe - 39-44 Panning for gold in inner city markets
by Prabal Chakrabarti - 45-65 Investment intermediaries in economic development: Linking public pension funds to urban revitalization
by Gordon L. Clark & Lisa A. Hagerman & Tessa Hebb - 67-77 The Brookings Urban Markets Initiative: Using information to drive change
by Alyssa Stewart Lee
2006, Issue 3
- 1-14 Innovative activity in rural areas: the importance of local and regional characteristics
by David L. Barkley & Mark Henry & Doohee Lee - 15-27 Financing rural innovation with community development venture capital: models, options and obstacles
by Julia Sass Rubin - 29-35 A vision for the future of rural developmental venture capital
by L. Ray Moncrief & Grady S. Vanderhoofven - 37-42 State governments start investing capital for entrepreneurs to grow the local economy and keep jobs
by George Lipper - 43-49 Organizing angel investment to benefit angels, companies, and communities
by Steve Mercil
2006, Issue 2
- 08-23 The secondary market for community development loans
by David J. Erickson - 24-30 Turning uncertainty into risk: why data are the key to greater investment
by Mary Tingerthal - 31-35 Growing pains
by Douglas Winn - 36-39 Bridging the information gap between capital markets investors and CDFIs
by Ellen Seidman - 40-43 Strategies for selling smaller pools of loans
by John McCarthy - 44-45 Check your guns at the door: how to get together to establish a secondary market
by Catherine Dolan
2006, Issue 1
- 1-16 Securitization and community lending: a framework and some lessons from the experience in the U.S. mortgage market
by Robert Van Order - 17-34 The struggle to establish a vibrant secondary market for community development loans
by David J. Erickson - 35-47 Manufactured housing finance and the secondary market
by Sean West - 49-55 Case study: Selling affordable housing loans in the secondary market
by George Vine - 57-63 Case study: The Community Development Trust taps Wall Street investors
by Judd S. Levy & Kenya Purnell - 65-67 Financing hope
by Frank L. Altman - 69-71 Taking capital for social purposes to a new level
by Nancy O. Andrews - 73-74 Leverage: securitizing community development construction loans
by John McCarthy
2005, Issue 1
- 1-11 The new markets tax credit program: a midcourse assessment
by Julia Sass Rubin & Gregory M. Stankiewicz - 13-20 Community perspective: is the NMTC making a difference in low-income communities?
by P. Jefferson Armistead - 21-32 The political history of and prospects for reauthorizing new markets
by Benson F. Roberts - 33-36 Investor perspective: how to invest in NMTCs
by Bob Taylor - 37-42 Case study from application to construction: Clearinghouse CDFI puts new markets tax credits to work
by Doug Bystry - 43-48 Case study from application to construction: lenders for community development put new markets tax credits to work
by Jeff Wells