University of Louisville law and urban studies professor Tony Arnold thinks so.

In an Oct. 14 talk, 鈥淭he War on Poverty (50 Years Later) and Resilient Communities,鈥 he will discuss the connection between land use policies and poverty. The free, public talk at noon in Room 275 at the Louis D. Brandeis School of Law is part of the Boehl Distinguished Lecture Series in Land Use Policy.

鈥淧resident Johnson visited Inez, Kentucky, in 1964 because it was one of the poorest areas in the nation,鈥 said Arnold.

鈥淧overty still persists in Kentucky and throughout the U.S.听 Unfortunately, our poverty policies gave too little attention to how social and economic conditions and environmental and land use conditions together create 鈥榩overty traps.鈥櫶 We should be paying attention to connections between society and the environment if we are to build the resilience of low-income communities,鈥 Arnold said.

is the Boehl Chair in Property and Land Use and also holds a position in the Department of Urban and Public Affairs in UofL鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences. He is an expert in land use and a proponent of adaptive governance鈥攖he flexible use of diverse policy options at many levels to help communities and nature adapt to changing conditions and sudden surprises, like flooding, storms, drought and urban heat islands.

听听听听听听听听听听听 The Boehl are funded by the Herbert Boehl Fund and the Kentucky Research Challenge Trust Fund.听 Several other programs in the Law School and the College of Arts and Sciences are co-sponsoring this lecture.

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Cindy Hess
Cindy Hess has more than 30 years of experience in communications, marketing and investor relations, including more than a decade at UofL. She is "sort of" retired but happy to come back to the Office of Communications and Marketing to help with special projects and assignments.