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Hannah Rosen

๐Ÿ‘ค Speaker
See mentions of this person in podcasts
3008 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

Okay, she's on Hudson Street. That's an amazing place to live. What had been all around her was, who was living there at the time? It wasn't other people like her, right?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

Okay, she's on Hudson Street. That's an amazing place to live. What had been all around her was, who was living there at the time? It wasn't other people like her, right?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

Okay, she's on Hudson Street. That's an amazing place to live. What had been all around her was, who was living there at the time? It wasn't other people like her, right?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

So if we freeze her there, then she's a heroine of the city who appreciates it in all its diversity. So then what happens? How does the tragedy begin?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

So if we freeze her there, then she's a heroine of the city who appreciates it in all its diversity. So then what happens? How does the tragedy begin?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

So if we freeze her there, then she's a heroine of the city who appreciates it in all its diversity. So then what happens? How does the tragedy begin?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

So the counterfactual history with no Jane Jacobs, I understand that this is imaginary, is what? You just build bigger, taller apartment buildings that more people can afford to move into, and you maintain it as a mixed neighborhood, which is partly immigrant, partly young professors.

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

So the counterfactual history with no Jane Jacobs, I understand that this is imaginary, is what? You just build bigger, taller apartment buildings that more people can afford to move into, and you maintain it as a mixed neighborhood, which is partly immigrant, partly young professors.

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

So the counterfactual history with no Jane Jacobs, I understand that this is imaginary, is what? You just build bigger, taller apartment buildings that more people can afford to move into, and you maintain it as a mixed neighborhood, which is partly immigrant, partly young professors.

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

And is this aesthetic? Is it just that it's historic preservation? Is it just about people arrive at a place and they have an aesthetic preference and that's what ends up freezing change? Like that's what ends up preventing change?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

And is this aesthetic? Is it just that it's historic preservation? Is it just about people arrive at a place and they have an aesthetic preference and that's what ends up freezing change? Like that's what ends up preventing change?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

And is this aesthetic? Is it just that it's historic preservation? Is it just about people arrive at a place and they have an aesthetic preference and that's what ends up freezing change? Like that's what ends up preventing change?

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

And I guess the communities who are less willing to see themselves that way because it goes against their sense of themselves are progressive communities. Like people who are interested in historic preservation, who say they love cities, who are interested in urban renewal. Like those are not the same people who think of themselves as complicit in โ€“ I mean your subtitle is โ€“

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

And I guess the communities who are less willing to see themselves that way because it goes against their sense of themselves are progressive communities. Like people who are interested in historic preservation, who say they love cities, who are interested in urban renewal. Like those are not the same people who think of themselves as complicit in โ€“ I mean your subtitle is โ€“

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

And I guess the communities who are less willing to see themselves that way because it goes against their sense of themselves are progressive communities. Like people who are interested in historic preservation, who say they love cities, who are interested in urban renewal. Like those are not the same people who think of themselves as complicit in โ€“ I mean your subtitle is โ€“

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

It's like breaking the engine of opportunity.

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

It's like breaking the engine of opportunity.

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

It's like breaking the engine of opportunity.

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

You talked about how this changes our framework on certain things like a housing crisis, that we tend to say there's a housing crisis, but that isn't quite right.

Radio Atlantic
Americans Are Stuck. Who's to Blame?

You talked about how this changes our framework on certain things like a housing crisis, that we tend to say there's a housing crisis, but that isn't quite right.