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About
the Center for Civic Innovation
The Center for Civic Innovation’s mandate is to improve the quality
of life in cities by shaping public policy and enriching public
discourse on urban issues. We believe that outdated, bureaucratic,
government-centered policies cannot revive our civic health, and
that cities will turn around only by devolving power and responsibility
to the people closest to any problem, whether they are police beat
cops, parents or local ministers. CCI is chaired by former Indianapolis
mayor Stephen Goldsmith.
Annually, up to five awards of $25,000 are presented at the Social Entrepreneurship
Awards Dinner in New York City. In addition, the Manhattan Institute also awards one
$100,000 grand prize, The William E. Simon Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Social
Entrepreneurship. Nominations may be submitted by anyone familiar with a person's
or group's activities except for a current employee of that person or group. Nominations
for the 2010 awards will be accepted online from January 25th until March 19th, 2010.
These prescriptions are contained in CCI’s authoritative publication:
The Entrepreneurial City: A How-To Handbook for Urban Innovators.
The
Entrepreneurial City is a collection of brief presentations
by America’s leading mayors and the nation’s most successful urban
policy experts, providing a comprehensive array of reforms that
can significantly improve the quality of life in our nation’s cities.
Among the mayors and former mayors represented in this volume are
New York’s Rudy Giuliani, Chicago’s Richard Daley, and Cleveland’s
Michael White.
CCI has also produced five “This
Works” reports on time-tested programs for urban revival.
These reports provide urban leaders with a “how to” guide for addressing
some of the fundamental challenges facing America's cities: finance,
crime, education, housing, economic development.
CCI’s main program areas are:
Education
Reform
Education reform, particularly in low-income urban
areas, is one of the top public policy concerns today, so it should
come as no surprise that the Manhattan Institute has the best education
reform experts in the country to offer practical advice to policymakers.
Leading the Institute’s efforts in this area is the nationally renowned
education researcher Jay P. Greene,
Ph.D. , Manhattan Institute Senior Fellow and endowed chair
and head of the Department of Education Reform at the University
of Arkansas.
Dr. Greene has conducted evaluations of school choice
and accountability programs in Florida, Charlotte, Milwaukee, Cleveland,
and San Antonio. Dr. Greene was the only researcher cited in the
Supreme Court’s majority opinion and Justice O’Connor’s concurring
opinion in the landmark Zelman v. Simmons-Harris case upholding
the constitutionality of school vouchers. He is author of the book
Education Myths. His articles have appeared in policy journals,
such as The Public Interest, City Journal, and Education
Next, in academic journals, such as The Georgetown Public
Policy Review, Education and Urban Society, and The
British Journal of Political Science, as well as in major newspapers,
such as the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post.
CCI’s work on education reform focuses on improving
two main reforms of public education: school choice and accountability.
School choice reforms (including charter schools and school vouchers)
are dedicated to improving the options available to parents of children
in public schools, and making public schools more directly accountable
to parents for education outcomes. Accountability reforms are devoted
to improving educational achievement by focusing on imparting knowledge
and skills and making teachers, administrators, and students accountable
for success or failure.
Crime
Reduction
One of CCI’s greatest successes has been its role in
reducing crime. The Center assisted and publicized Senior Fellow
George Kelling’s work on the
“fixing broken windows theory,” which has gone on to become the
focal point of police reforms in numerous cities across the country,
including New York, Philadelphia and Los Angeles. This theory holds
that public disorder, like graffiti, leads to greater social pathology
if left unattended. The Center also enabled Kelling and Catherine
Coles to publish Fixing Broken Windows: Restoring Order &
Reducing Crime in Our Communities, which details how the “broken
windows” policing strategy is sweeping the country.
CCI and Professor Kelling are also co-coordinating
a new initiative utilizing the “broken windows” method known as
Safe Cities. Safe Cities is a pilot program designed to assist
local and state law enforcement agencies in their ongoing efforts
to detect and deter terrorist attacks in the United States. The
Safe Cities initiative is being developed in consultation with counter-terrorism
agencies from across the Eastern seaboard.
CCI Senior Fellow Richard Greenwald
is working with Mayor Cory Booker of Newark, New Jersey to devise
a prisoner reentry strategy. This strategy places emphasis on
helping recently released prisoners find and maintain jobs and develop
positive relationships with their children and families. This will
reduce recidivism among the 1,400 parolees released each year to
the streets of Newark.
New
York City and State Fiscal Policy
New York City and New York State impose tax regimes
on their citizens that are among the highest in the nation. As a
result, both New Yorks tend to lag the nation in economic development
and job creation. Manhattan Institute Senior Fellow for Tax and
Budgetary Studies E.J. McMahon
monitors the finances of New York City and New York State governments
and deciphers their implications for taxpayers and the business
climate. His ongoing commentary and analysis of important fiscal
issues can be found on his website,
NYFiscalwatch.com.
Social
Entrepreneurship
From the Founding to the present, America has been
defined by a vibrant civil society where individuals come together
in voluntary organizations of all sizes to help solve common problems.
The Manhattan Institute's Award for Social
Entrepreneurship honors contemporary non-profit leaders who
have found innovative, private solutions for America’s most pressing
social problems.
Annually, up to five awards of $25,000 are presented at the Social Entrepreneurship Awards Dinner
in New York City. In addition, the Manhattan Institute also awards one $100,000 grand prize, The William E. Simon
Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Social Entrepreneurship. Nominations may be submitted by anyone familiar with a
person's or group's activities except for a current employee of that person or group. Nominations for the 2010
awards will be accepted online from January 25th until March 19th, 2010.
Welfare
Reform
Many of our nation’s cities continue to experience
high levels of poverty, with significant segments of their urban
populations seemly locked in an intractable cycle of unemployment
and government dependence.
The welfare reforms enacted in the mid-1990s were designed
to address these problems, and welfare reform remains one of the
nation’s most impressive public policy success stories. Nonetheless,
welfare reforms remain under constant pressure and criticism, and
much work remains to be done to ensure that America’s urban areas
are integrated into the mainstream economy—a precondition for access
to the American dream.
CCI is committed to documenting the successes of welfare
reform and exploring how it can be improved and expanded. CCI’s
initiative Gaining Ground? Measuring the Impact of America’s
Welfare Revolution, led by Dr. June O’Neill, Ph.D., the former
director of the Congressional Budget Office, will track the success
of the national law and state initiatives by analyzing the workforce
participation and household earnings of single mothers, and family
formation in the post-reform era.
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