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Contributors

NewGeography.com is a joint venture of Joel Kotkin and Praxis Strategy Group  read more »

Michael Shires

Basic Info
Contriuting Editor

Michael Shires is an associate professor of public policy and director of the Murray S. Craig Digital Democracy Laboratory, an initiative examining ways that technology can enhance government official accountability. He previously was a research fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California and a doctoral fellow at RAND's Graduate School of Policy Studies, concentrating on domestic education policy, California fiscal policy, and international trade policy.

Delore Zimmerman

Basic Info
Publisher

Delore is a strategy consultant with twenty-five years of domestic and international experience working with local and regional economic development groups, companies and universities. He co-developed the High-Performance Community Initiative while a Senior Fellow at the Denver-based Center for the New West. As a research principal investigator he has been awarded seven Small Business Innovation Research awards from USDA to develop leading-edge practices and tools for use by development professionals and community leaders.

All Cities Ranking

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Joel Kotkin

Basic Info
Executive Editor

Described by the New York Times as “America’s uber-geographer,” Joel Kotkin is an internationally-recognized authority on global, economic, political and social trends. His latest book, The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class is now available in paperback.

Mr. Kotkin is the Roger Hobbs Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University in Orange, California and directs the Center for Demographics and Policy there. He is Executive Editor of the widely read website NewGeography.com. He has a regular column in Spiked in the UK, the National Post in Canada and the American Mind. He also writes regularly for UnHerd, Quillette, the Los Angeles Times, National Review, City Journal, The Daily Telegraph and The Spectator as well as many other national publications.

Kotkin is the author of ten previously published books, including the widely praised The New Class Conflict (Telos Press), which describes the changing dynamics of class in America. He authored The Human City: Urbanism for the Rest of Us in 2016 and co-edited, with MIT’s Alan Berger, the 2018 collection Infinite Suburbia. He also co-edited, with Ryan Streeter, a book on the future of cities.

Other past books include The Next Hundred Million: America in 2050, which explores how the nation will evolve in the next four decades. The City: A Global History and Tribes: How Race, Religion and Identity Are Reshaping the Global Economy, which were published in numerous languages.

Mr. Kotkin has published reports on topics ranging from the future of class in global cities to the places with the best opportunities for minorities. His 2013 report, “Post-familialism: Humanity’s Future,” an examination of the world’s future demography, was published by the Civil Service College of Singapore and Chapman University and has been widely commented on not only in the United States, but in Israel, Brazil, Canada and other countries. He is currently directing a study for the Center at Chapman on the future of California’s Latinos.

He has spoken to groups ranging from small numbers of CEOs to large international organizations. Consulting work has included ideas about improving American competitiveness and the US business climate as well as studies of Singapore, Montreal, New York, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Houston, San Bernardino, and St. Louis, among others.

Los Angeles, CA

Moving To Smaller Cities

Image: 
SmallerCities.gif
Notes: 
Chart shows cumulative net migration by size of metropolitan area. Areas are include the total metro region and are grouped by population.
Source: 
U.S. Census Population Estimates Program compiled by Demographia.com

2008 Overall Rank Area State Nonfarm Employment (1,000s) 2008 Size Group Rank Change Since 2007 Weighted Index
1 Midland, TX Texas 66.8 S 16 98.5
2 St. George, UT Utah 53.5 S -1 96.9
3