Center for Urban Research and Learning

Center for Urban Research and Learning
Established 1996 (1996)
Location
  • Cuneo Hall, 4th Floor
    1032 W. Sheridan Rd.
    Chicago, Illinois
Affiliated faculty
25 persons
Advisory Board
13 members
Parent organization
Loyola University Chicago
Affiliations Jesuit, Catholic
Website CURL

Center for Urban Research and Learning (CURL) was founded at Loyola University Chicago in 1996 to create innovative ways to promote equity and opportunity in communities in the Chicago metropolitan area. The team model employed unites research faculty with students and community leaders throughout the urban development process.

Approach

In January 1996 the McCormick Tribune Foundation offered a $1.5 million matching grant for the endowment of CURL. The grant was matched and a $7 million endowment established. This supports faculty, student, and community fellowships along with general research activities. Further support comes from grants and contracts from foundations, government agencies, and non-profit organizations for community-based research.[1]

CURL accepts projects that hold promise for truly collaborative planning, with continual interchange between faculty, students, and community. The projects arise from community-identified needs, and the community is vitally involved at every stage of planning. This approach should alter the way in which faculty and students see themselves, as teachers and learners. It should also change the way activists, the community, and government see themselves as involved in a collaborative effort. The focus in all this is on social, economic, and political inequities. While projects are local to the Chicago area, linkages outside the area take place to profit from a wider interchange of ideas. Knowledge of what is learned and achieved is shared within the university community and with the wider community where this might be beneficial.[1] CURL is part of the larger effort at Loyola Chicago, with the university ranked 21st in the nation in community service hours.[2]

Projects

The nature of CURL is best understood by reviewing some of its projects, which follow.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 CURL. Retrieved March 21, 2016.
  2. Washington Monthly. Accessed 9 May 2016. Archived April 2, 2016, at the Wayback Machine.
  3. "Community Partners". Greater Roseland West Pullman Food Network. Retrieved 2016-03-21.
  4. Kellogg
  5. "Publications | ONE Northside". onenorthside.org. Retrieved 2016-03-21.
  6. CFW
  7. Uptown

Coordinates: 41°59′57.17″N 87°39′30.03″W / 41.9992139°N 87.6583417°W / 41.9992139; -87.6583417

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