October 12, 1995
New York, NY
Washington Abandons the Cities was a symposium presented by The Academy of Political Science, Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, Homes for the Homeless, and Community Service Society of New York.
American cities have long been the gateway to economic prosperity and cultural assimilation. Yet today, they are plagued with financial difficulties and social unrest. What lies ahead for our nation's cities? Is it the responsibility of the federal government to support them as engines of growth, or does their decline over the last thirty years illustrate an unspoken policy to abandon them? The answers to these and other questions were addressed and debated by esteemed experts from the fields of social policy, political science, government and economics.
Charles E. Schumer
U.S. House of Representatives
Ralph Da Costa Nunez
President/CEO, Homes for the Homeless
Demetrios Caraley
President, The Academy of Political Science
Leonard N. Stern
Chairman, Hartz Industries
John Jay Iselin
President, Cooper Union
Demetrios Caraley
Janet Robb Professor of the Social Sciences Barnard College and Columbia University
Bill Green
Former Representative, U.S. House
Robert D. Reischauer
Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution
Former Director, Congressional Budget Office
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