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                <text>Matt Kaliner, Professor </text>
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                <text>Matt Kaliner has been fascinated by urban culture since he was old enough to pedal his bicycle into – and all over – Washington. Attending Brandeis University, Class of 2000, for college, Kaliner has warmed up to Boston as an equally interesting mosaic of neighborhoods and a physical expression of public culture and difference. Although he still feels most at home exploring the city on bike or foot, he has found in sociology and spatial analysis a much more powerful set of tools for the systematic study of the city. Kaliner’s dissertation draws on a series of life-long interests, from the fear of crime and real estate markets to the spatial dynamics of artistic communities, to explore culture and neighborhood change in the contemporary American city. He has published papers on the cultural and political divergence of Vermont and New Hampshire (with Jason Kaufman), the political philosophy of Michael Oakeshott (with Steven Teles), the uses of social science data archives (with Jacqueline James), and political protest patterns and tactics (with Bayliss Camp). His undergraduate senior thesis considered the sociology of intellectuals in the work of Karl Mannheim and Pierre Bourdieu, speaking to his love of abstract theory as well as grounded research.</text>
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                <text>David Luberoff</text>
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                <text>David Luberoff is a lecturer on sociology and a senior project advisor to the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study’s Boston Area Research Initiative. From 2004 until 2012, he was Executive Director of Harvard’s Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston, which seeks to improve the governance of the region by strengthening ties between scholars, students, officials, and civic leaders, thus addressing a variety of key urban issues. He co-developed and co-taught “Reinventing Boston,” a General Education class at Harvard that used Boston to introduce undergraduates to a variety of urban issues. He has also been Associate Director of the Taubman Center for State and Local Government at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, an adjunct lecturer at both the Kennedy School and Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, and editor of The Tab, the largest group of weekly newspapers in greater Boston. The author of many articles and case studies on the politics of infrastructure and land-use policies, he is the co-author (with Alan Altshuler) of Mega-Projects: The Changing Politics of Urban Public Investment, which was named 2003’s best book on urban politics by the American Political Science Association’s urban section. He received an M.P.A. from the Kennedy School of Government.</text>
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