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11.442 Geography of the Global Economy
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(Subject meets with 11.142)
Prereq: None
Units: 3-0-9
Lecture: M2-5 (9-450A)
Analyzes implications of economic globalization for communities, regions, international businesses and economic development organizations. Uses spatial analysis techniques to model the role of energy resources in shaping international political economy. Investigates key drivers of human, physical, and social capital flows and their roles in modern human settlement systems. Surveys contemporary models of industrialization and places them in geographic context. Connects forces of change with their implications for the distribution of wealth and human well-being. Looks backward to understand pre-Covid conditions and then returns to the present to understand how a global pandemic changes the world. Class relies on current literature and explorations of sectors. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Staff
No textbook information available11.961 Independent Study: Real Estate
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Prereq: None
Units arranged
TBA.
Opportunity for independent study under regular supervision by a faculty member.
Fall: A. Chegut
Spring: Kennedy, John
No textbook information available11.S950-11.S957 Special Seminar: Urban Studies and Planning
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Prereq: Permission of instructor
Units arranged [P/D/F]
11.S951: TBA.
For graduate students wishing to pursue further study in advanced areas of urban studies and city and regional planning not covered in regular subjects of instruction
Fall: J. Jackson
IAP: E. Ben-Joseph, M. Ocampo
Spring: J. Jackson
11.S950: No textbook information available
11.S951: No textbook information available
11.S953: No textbook information available
11.S954: No textbook information available
11.S955: No textbook information available
11.S956: No textbook information available
11.S957: No textbook information available11.332[J] Urban Design Studio
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(Same subject as 4.163[J])
Prereq: Permission of instructor
Units arranged
Design: TR1-5 (10-485)
The design of urban environments. Strategies for change in large areas of cities, to be developed over time, involving different actors. Fitting forms into natural, man-made, historical, and cultural contexts; enabling desirable activity patterns; conceptualizing built form; providing infrastructure and service systems; guiding the sensory character of development. Involves architecture and planning students in joint work; requires individual designs or design and planning guidelines.
R. Segal
No required or recommended textbooks11.S940-11.S944 Special Subject: Urban Studies and Planning
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Prereq: Permission of instructor
Units arranged
11.S940: Lecture: R2-5 (9-217)
For graduate students wishing to pursue further study in advanced areas of urban studies and city and regional planning not covered in regular subjects of instruction.
Catherine D'Ignazio
11.S940: No textbook information available
11.S941: No textbook information available
11.S942: No required or recommended textbooks
11.S943: No textbook information available
11.S944: No textbook information available11.351 Real Estate Ventures I: Negotiating Development-Phase Agreements
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Prereq: None
Units: 3-0-9
Lecture: R EVE (6-9 PM) (9-354)
Focuses on key business and legal issues within the principal agreements used to control, entitle, capitalize, and construct a mixed-use real estate development. Through the lens of the real estate developer and its counter-parties, students identify, discuss, and negotiate the most important business issues in right of entry, purchase and sale, development, and joint-venture agreements, as well as a construction contract and construction loan agreement. Students work closely with attorneys who specialize in the construction of such agreements and with students from area law schools and Columbia University and New York University. Enrollment limited to approximately 25; preference to MSRED students. No listeners.
W. T. McGrath
No textbook information availableTotal units: 24+
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