About Professor Chakroborty
Arnab Chakraborty's research concerns critical questions of housing and infrastructure development, and the role of technology in advancing urban analysis and planning. In addition to his academic appointments, he is an editorial board member of the Journal of the American Planning Association and an associate editor of the Journal of Urban Planning and Development. He is an associate dean in the College of Fine and Applied Arts with the responsibility to oversee the college's research support efforts, administer the promotion and tenure process, lead the college's faculty mentoring program, and advise the dean on matters related to faculty affairs.
Professor Chakraborty's research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, Federal Highway Administration, Urban Institute, and the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, among others. His ongoing projects include mapping urban vulnerability to climate change, and using scenario analysis techniques to advance long range planning. His current projects are in Champaign-Urbana, Chicago, and India, and involve considerable collaboration with technology companies as well as federal and international organizations.
Professor Chakrabory teaches the following courses on a regular basis: UP 510 Plan Making, UP 547 Regional Planning and Policy, and UP 312 Communication for Planners. He is offering a new online course, UP 433 Scenarios, Plans, and the Future City this summer. Occasionally, he offers UP 543 Environmental Policy and Planning, and study abroad courses. In the past, he has taught Microeconomics of Public Policy and Planning, and GIS. His courses stress the importance of critical thinking and collaboration, and the need to connect techniques learnt in the class to real-world planning situations.
For over fifteen years, Professor Chakraborty has advised and consulted on various land use and transport projects both in the U.S. and abroad. He conducts regular training workshops on scenario analysis at the APA's National Planning Conference, serves on Lincoln Institutes scenario planning expert panel, and has taught short courses internationally, most recently in India, China, Taiwan, Curacao, and the Netherlands.
Prior to his PhD, Professor Chakraborty received a master's degree in urban planning and policy from the University of Illinois at Chicago and a bachelor in architecture from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur. In the past, he has taught at the Johns Hopkins University and worked for the Chicago Transit Authority. At Illinois, Professor Chakraborty is also associated with the Center for Global Studies, Center for South Asian and Middle Eastern Studeis. He is also an affiliate faculty of the National Center for Smart Growth Research and Education, and a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners and site visitor pool of the Planning Accreditation Board.
Education
- PhD Regional Planning, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2013)
- MUP, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2009)
- BS, Civil Engineering, United States Air Force Academy (1996)
Research and publications
Ongoing and upcoming research
Urban governance, sustainable development and processes of urban restructuring. How are regions, cities and communities managing society’s mounting climate and environmental dilemmas and what is the effect of different policy approaches and governance arrangements on society and the built environment? Cities are now confronted with multiple challenges – unsustainable patterns of growth, planning for resilience in the context of a changing climate, and rising inequality. How are efforts to address the ecological viability of cities and regions incorporating concerns for environmental justice, inequality, and the distribution of costs and benefits with regard to processes of environmental policy formation and implementation?
Research projects
- Sustainable urban development and the New Regionalism
- Land use policy and resiliency
- Place-making and the creative city
Selected publications
Chakraborty, A., D. Allred and R. H. Boyer. 2013. Zoning Restrictiveness and Housing Foreclosures: Exploring a New Link to the Subprime Mortgage Crisis. Housing Policy Debate 23(2): 1-27. Read publication
Chakraborty, A., and D. Allred. 2015. Connecting regional governance, urban form, and energy use: Opportunities and limitations. Current Sustainable/Renewable Energy Reports 36: 1-7. Read publication
Allred, D. and A. Chakraborty. 2015. Do Local Development Outcomes Follow Voluntary Regional Plans? Evidence From Sacramento Region's Blueprint Plan, Journal of the American Planning Association 81(2): 104-120. DOI: 10.1080/01944363.2015.1067574. Read publication
Allred, D. 2015. Development governances and the New Regionalism: How the ‘smart growth machine’ is restructuring metropolitan space. In D. Wilson (Ed.) The Politics of the Urban Sustainability Concept, Champaign, IL: Common Ground Research Networks. DOI:10.18848/978-1-61229. Read publication
Teaching and advising
Classes taught
- UP 330: The Modern American City
- UP 505: Urban and Regional Analysis
- UP 545: Economic Development Planning and Policy
- UP 589: Research Design
- UP 594: Policy Mobility
Students advised
Ph.D students
- Max Eisenburger: Economic Development and the Solar Industry. Ph.D. Expected 2019
- Steve Sherman: Policing, Planmaking and Anchor Institutions. Ph.D. Expected 2019
- Ozge Yenigun: Migration, Diversity and Economic Development. Ph.D. Expected 2021.
MUP students
- Adrienne Cooke: Fair Workweek Policies (Spring 2019)
- Tejashree Kulkarni: Workforce Development (Spring 2019)
- Jacob Malmsten: East-Central Illinois Labor Market Profile (Spring 2019)