Seeds of Growth Sustainable Community Development: What Works, What Doesn't, and Why
A Federal Reserve System Community Affairs Research Conference
Held in Washington, D.C.
March 27-28, 2003
This Web site contains the papers from a conference organized by the Community Affairs Officers of the Federal Reserve System. Papers included in the Web site are to be considered working papers. They are reproduced here to make them available to scholars and practitioners with a serious interest in the topics presented. Many of the papers are in preliminary form and will be submitted for publication elsewhere. The works here should be cited as working papers and considered preliminary drafts of any subsequent publication. Although all papers have been screened for relevance to the subject matter of the conference, they have not been subjected to a rigorous refereeing process nor edited for form or content by the Federal Reserve.
Summary (PDF,245KB)
Opening Remarks (PDF,14KB)
William Poole President, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Welcoming Address
Michael H. Moskow
President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Keynote Address 
Alan Greenspan
Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Session 1
Session 2
Session 3
Session 4
Session 5
Session 6
Session Three: Partnerships
Making Business A Partner In Redeveloping Abandoned Central City Property: Is Profit A Realistic Possibility? (PDF, 189KB)
Elise Bright, University of Texas, Arlington, TX
Community Partnerships:
A Sustainable Resource for Nongovernmental Organizations (PDF,243KB)
Mark Tranel and Kay Gasen, University of Missouri, St. Louis, MO
Corporate Civic Investment Funds: New Models for Community Development Finance? (PDF,406KB)
Amy L.W. Hosier, ICF Consultin, Fairfax, VA
Neighborhood Revitalization in New York City in the 1990s (PDF,292KB)
Jason Bram, Jesse Edgerton, Yigal Gelb, Andrew Haughwout, David Lagakos, Margaret McConnell, and James Orr, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York, NY
Discussion Comments
Partnerships (PDF,138KB)
Ken Wade, Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation, Boston, MA
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