Posted by Alumni from The Conversation
June 5, 2025
'Without a doubt, we have to ensure that more investment comes back into our neighborhoods and that we're activating our commercial corridors,' the race's front-runner, Detroit City Council President Mary Sheffield, said. Helping Detroit residents improve their neighborhoods will be an important task for the city's next mayor. I do not live in Detroit, but my family lived there for generations before my grandparents joined the white flight from the city in the 1970s. And my research on housing, infrastructure and land use law offers some ideas for how the next mayor could encourage investment while at the same time improving social equity. And after experiencing the largest-ever municipal bankruptcy, the city boasts an investment-grade credit rating. For the past two years, the city has gained population after decades of losses. But many of the city's neighborhoods, from Brightmoor to Jefferson-Chalmers, have not experienced the same economic surge as its booming downtown. In the... learn more