Amy T. Khare, PhD

Research Director
National Initiative on Mixed-Income Communities
Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences

Amy Turnbull Khare is currently on leave. She has worked nationally for the past 20 years as a practitioner, policy consultant, and researcher in the areas of urban poverty, racial justice, affordable housing, and community development. Khare鈥檚 methodological training is as an urban ethnographer, and her professional experiences working in social justice endeavors lay the foundation of her scholarly interests.

Based in Chicago, she serves as the Research Director of the National Initiative on Mixed-Income Communities. She leads applied research projects and advises public, private, and non-profit partners around the country with a focus on anti-racism, inclusion, and equity. 

Most recently, Khare co-edited the book What Works to Promote Inclusive, Equitable Mixed-Income Communities, published a series of papers on Black-centered community development in Chicago, collaborated with the City of San Francisco鈥檚 HOPE SF initiative to develop the , and co-developed two practical resources on racial equity in housing and community development. In collaboration with the Urban Institute and Chicago鈥檚 Metropolitan Planning Council, Khare completed study, which quantifies the economic costs of racial and economic segregation and advances equitable policy recommendations. 

Khare received her doctorate from the University of Chicago in 2016 and her MSW (1999) and BSW (1997) from the University of Kansas. Her research has been published in Urban Affairs Review, Journal of Urban Affairs, and Cityscape, as well as featured in Shelterforce, WBEZ-NPR, Chicago Sun Times, and other media outlets. She previously worked for the Urban Institute and Chicago鈥檚 Heartland Alliance. In 2015, Khare was honored by the Urban Affairs Association with the Emerging Scholar Award, presented to one doctoral candidate in the nation. Her work is inspired by her personal experiences as a sibling and a mother in the disability rights movement.

Biosketch
Curriculum Vitae

Publications

Books

Khare, Amy T. (惭补苍耻蝉肠谤颈辫迟).鈥Poverty, Power, and Profit: Neoliberal Racial Capitalism in America鈥檚 Largest Public Housing Transformation.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Joseph, Mark L., and Amy T. Khare. 2020. 鈥What Works to Promote Inclusive, Equitable Mixed-Income Communities.鈥 San Francisco, CA: Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

Journal Articles

Khare, Amy T., Joseph, Mark L., Hirsch, Joni. (In review). 鈥淧romoting equity and inclusion in rapidly gentrifying cities: Implications of city-led, mixed-income redevelopment initiatives in San Francisco and Washington, D.C.鈥 Housing Policy Debate.

Khare, Amy T. July 2022. 鈥淎dvancing Racial Equity within Federal Housing Policy.鈥 Cityscape: A Journal of Policy Development and Research.

Khare, Amy T. 2020. 鈥淭hree Local Policy Innovations that Promote Inclusive, Equitable Mixed-Income Communities.鈥 Shelterforce: The Journal of Affordable Housing and Community Building.

Khare, Amy T. and Emily K. Miller. 2020. 鈥淔acing Segregation: Housing Policy Solutions for a Stronger Society.鈥 Social Service Review 94, no.1: 169-175. 

Khare, Amy T. and Mark L. Joseph. 2019. 鈥淧rioritizing Inclusion and Equity in the Next Generation of Mixed-Income Communities.鈥 Shelterforce: The Journal of Affordable Housing and Community Building.

Khare, Amy T. and Mark L. Joseph. 2019. 鈥淧romoting Equity and Inclusion through Problematizing Concentrated White Affluence.鈥 Race and Poverty: 50 Years After the Fair Housing Act. Penn Institute for Urban Research. University of Pennsylvania, 15-20.   

Joseph, Mark L., Robert J. Chaskin, Amy T. Khare, and Jung-Eun Kim. 2019. 鈥淭he Organizational Challenges of Mixed-Income Development: Privatizing Public Housing through Cross-sector Collaboration.鈥 Urban Research & Practice 12:1, 61-83. 

Katz, Colleen Cary, Elsaesser, Caitlin, Klodnik, Vanessa Vorhies, and Khare, Amy. 2019. 鈥淢entoring Matters: An Innovative Approach to Infusing Mentorship in a Social Work Doctoral Program.鈥 Journal of Social Work Education 55:2, 306-313. 

Khare, Amy T. 2017. 鈥淧rivatization in an Era of Economic Crisis: Using Market-based Policies to Remedy Market Failures.鈥 Housing Policy Debate 28(1): 6-28.

Khare, Amy T. and Janet Smith. 2016. 鈥淧utting the Public Back into Public Housing: A Justice-oriented Agenda.鈥 Shelterforce: The Journal of Affordable Housing and Community Building.

Khare, Amy T. 2015. 鈥淧utting People Back Into Place-Based Public Policies.鈥 Special issue titled: Urban Policy in the Time of Obama. Journal of Urban Affairs 37(1): 47-52.

Khare, Amy T., Mark L. Joseph, and Robert J. Chaskin. 2015. 鈥淭he Enduring Significance of Race in Mixed-Income Developments.鈥 Urban Affairs Review 15(4): 474-503.

Khare, Amy T. 2013. 鈥淢arket-Driven Public Housing Reforms: Inadequacy for Poverty Alleviation.鈥 Special symposium titled: Mixed Messages on Mixed Income. Cityscape: A Journal of Policy Development and Research 15(2): 193-204.

Chaskin, Robert J., Amy T. Khare and Mark L. Joseph. 2012. 鈥淧articipation, Deliberation and Decision Making: The Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion in Mixed-Income Developments.鈥 Urban Affairs Review 48(6): 863-906.

Education

Doctor of Philosophy
University of Chicago
Master of Social Work
University of Kansas
Bachelor of Social Work
University of Kansas

Additional Information