1.What does this organization work on, how long have they been around, and why are they of interest to this class?
2.What have they done – through research, community development, social programming, or education forum, for example-- that illustrates how they have worked to improve housing in Philadelphia?
3.What timeline of events illustrates how this way of addressing environmental public health has developed?
4.What is the organization’s approach to housing? Does this organization claim to have a new or unique way of addressing housing? Does this approach point to or suggest problems with other approaches?
5.What data have they collected or used to support their approach to housing? Have they used visualizations of data? (Include a link of image file)
6.What research has the organization produced or drawn on on in their initiatives – in the last year, and over the last decade?
7.What programs, sources of funding, policies, government agencies, other organizations or infrastructures do they rely on in their housing work?
8.What social ecology does this organization work within, and how did it shaped their way of conceiving and engaging housing?
9.What events or problems motivate their ways of thinking about and engaging housing?
10.What funding enables their work and possibly shapes their way of thinking about housing?
11.Does the organization address social inequalities, historical legacies, economic conditions, or other political economic factors that shape housing?
12.What does this organization seem to find methodologically challenging or concerning in dealing with housing?
13.What kinds of governance are (implicitly or explicitly) called for in the way they think about housing?
14.How can The Housing Politics class enable or supplement this way of thinking about housing, and the work of this organization?
1.What does this organization work on, how long have they been around, and why are they of interest to this class?
2.What have they done – through research, community development, social programming, or education forum, for example-- that illustrates how they have worked to improve housing in Philadelphia?
3.What timeline of events illustrates how this way of addressing environmental public health has developed?
4.What is the organization’s approach to housing? Does this organization claim to have a new or unique way of addressing housing? Does this approach point to or suggest problems with other approaches?
5.What data have they collected or used to support their approach to housing? Have they used visualizations of data? (Include a link of image file)
6.What research has the organization produced or drawn on on in their initiatives – in the last year, and over the last decade?
7.What programs, sources of funding, policies, government agencies, other organizations or infrastructures do they rely on in their housing work?
8.What social ecology does this organization work within, and how did it shaped their way of conceiving and engaging housing?
9.What events or problems motivate their ways of thinking about and engaging housing?
10.What funding enables their work and possibly shapes their way of thinking about housing?
11.Does the organization address social inequalities, historical legacies, economic conditions, or other political economic factors that shape housing?
12.What does this organization seem to find methodologically challenging or concerning in dealing with housing?
13.What kinds of governance are (implicitly or explicitly) called for in the way they think about housing?
14.How can The Housing Politics class enable or supplement this way of thinking about housing, and the work of this organization?