1. Camille Wilson and co-authors receive the Marie O. Weil Best Article Award

    Camille Wilson and co-authors receive the Marie O. Weil Best Article Award from The Association for Community Organization & Social Action and the Journal of Community Practice. The award recognizes the timeliness and creativity of Wilson and her colleagues’ scholarship.


  2. Marsal School gift funds resources at The School at Marygrove

    Emil and Julie Michael created a gift fund to provide books and other resources for the K-12 libraries at The School at Marygrove.

  3. DNEP’s Community Tech Worker project expands with NSF grant

    The Community Tech Worker program expands to help bolster small businesses after the School of Information was awarded a $750,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. The Detroit Neighborhood Entrepreneurs Project, which started the program on the city’s east side, has partnered with Live6 Alliance to make it available to small businesses on the city’s northwest side.

    1. Taubman College researchers receive NSF grant to help rehabilitate vacant Detroit homes

      The initiative, “Rehab for America: Housing Resilience for Detroit Communities,” addresses the nation’s housing affordability crisis by creating resources for and efficiencies in the process of rehabilitating abandoned homes.

    2. Building up communities by empowering residents with real estate knowledge

      Chase Cantrell brings a new perspective to real estate development with online course focused on helping residents invest in their own communities. Nearly a decade after the launch of Building Community Value, Cantrell is taking that same education and empowerment mindset beyond the boundaries of southeast Michigan with an open online course on real estate development-a course open to anyone with Internet access.

    3. Detroit’s reparations task force now has until 2025 to make its report, but going slow with this challenging work may not be a bad thing

      We are a team of University of Michigan-based scholars of political science and sociology specializing in public opinion and attitudes toward reparations. Our research provides important context for understanding the challenges Detroit’s reparations committee faces.

    4. U-M closes on nearly 2.3 acres of land in Detroit

      U-M closed on a parcel of land for $9.5 million. The parcel, strategically located across the street from the U-M Center for Innovation, is expected to support the center’s future needs. Part of the nearly 2.3-acre parcel will be used for a parking structure.

    5. Architecture grad student awarded grant for anti-racism research

      Abraham Alzoubi, M.Arch ‘25 was awarded a summer research grant by the U-M National Center for Institutional Diversity (NCID) to investigate the various land uses in Detroit and Palestine. It was one of 19 grants given to graduate students and teams at the University of Michigan through the provost-funded Anti-Racism Collaborative. Alzoubi plans to use the grant to fund field expeditions to Detroit and Palestine and learn more about the ongoing efforts of activists to fight against land commodification. 

    6. Beating the odds: Students at Detroit public schools are less depressed, anxious

      The share of 8th-12th grade students reporting depression and anxiety symptoms fell below pre-pandemic levels in 2022-23 in the Detroit Public School Community District—which is the opposite of national trends.