Staff

Gordon Douglas

Gordon C. C. Douglas

Director of the Institute for Metropolitan Studies

Gordon Douglas is an associate professor of urban and regional planning at San José State University. Gordon’s research, teaching, and community work focus on questions of access, equity, and local cultural identity in urban planning and design. He is the author of The Help-Yourself City: Legitimacy and Inequality in DIY Urbanism (Oxford, 2018), and his writing and photography have appeared in publications ranging from academic journals to magazines, newspapers, and blogs. He has been interviewed as an expert on topics ranging from gentrification to graffiti for stories in The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, 99% Invisible, Fast Company, Streetsblog, the National Post (Toronto), La Presse (Montreal), and multiple TV and radio news outlets. Born in London and raised in Northern California, Gordon received his doctorate in sociology from the University of Chicago and also holds degrees from the University of Southern California and the London School of Economics. As Director of the Institute for Metropolitan Studies, he works to expand the relevance and visibility of the institute as a source for public programming, research, and pedagogy for SJSU and the communities we serve.

Alex Schafran, Ph.D

Alex Schafran, Ph.D

IMS Fellow

Alex Schafran is an author, strategist and researcher focused on housing and urban development, particularly in California. He is the author of The Road to Resegregation: Northern California and the Failure of Politics (UC Press, 2018), a book which explains how and why one of the wealthiest and most progressive regions in the country resegregated so dramatically. His newest book, The Spatial Contract: A New Politics of Provision for an Urbanized Planet, lays the foundation for building a new social contract for key systems like housing and transportation, and imagines a world where these systems we rely upon for basic freedoms play a greater role in our politics. He lives in Oakland, and works to develop new coalitions and strategies for California housing and development politics. You can find his new writing on California on his Substack, Where We Go From Here. A longtime academic, he is excited to play a role in helping the IMS grow and transform.

Lou Jimenez

Lourdes Jimenez

portrait done by Samuel Rodriguez, 2018

Lourdes Jimenez is the IMS Program Assistant and a current senior at SJSU. She is majoring in Art History & Visual Communication while simultaneously working towards an Urban Studies minor. Her interests and focus are researching cultural synergies and semiotic fields that contribute to the cultural economy of an urban landscape and plans to proceed with the MUP program offered at SJSU.

Chris Hazel

Chris Hazel

Program Assistant

Chris Hazel is a housing, planning, and design professional. He received a bachelors of science in architecture from the University of Illinois and a Masters of Urban Planning from SJSU, with a certificate in affordable housing and community development finance. His research and work focus on affordable and fair housing policy, community design, and equity. At SJSU he wrote Misplaced Trust, an empirical research report on the capacity of community land trusts to provide equity and stability in high opportunity areas. Previously he has worked in community development for municipalities in Illinois and California, founded and led local community organizations, and practiced as a freelance designer. He now focuses on housing and spatial analysis as a Planner/ GIS analyst at PlaceWorks. As the IMS Program Assistant he supports the organization to share important housing and planning work and connect the professional community.

Archival image of freeway plans

Leila Ullmann

IMS Fellow

With a background in academic research, policy strategy, and community organizing, Leila’s work pursues creative strategies to fight gentrification, displacement, and a constantly changing climate by transforming colonial relationships to land to return us to just relationship with and within our surroundings. She was born and raised upon the unceded land of the Muwekma Ohlone people— who are currently seeking federal recognition for their ancestral connection to the land— also known as San José. As Visiting Scholar with IMS, she designed and leads Beneath I-280, an archival excavation of a neighborhood lost to the San José freeway. She is a member-organizer of the South Bay Community Land Trust, the region’s first community-stewarded land trust. She is currently pursuing her Masters in Urban and Regional Planning at UCLA, and studied African American Studies at Princeton University. She is thrilled to continue to support and grow the work of IMS through research and advocacy.