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UM Detroit Center aims to tackle city’s challenges. You’re invited

March 5, 2026

The University of Michigan Detroit Center is organizing a workshop series called "Workshop of Democracy: 21st Century Solutions from the Motor City" to highlight grassroots solutions emerging from Detroit rather than focusing solely on the city's problems. The series, created in partnership with BridgeDetroit as media partner, features panel discussions on five critical topics including food sovereignty, community land trusts, equitable economic development, environmental justice, and police reform. Faculty Director Paul Draus emphasizes that Detroit, despite facing democratic challenges like emergency management and structural economic issues, has consistently developed community-driven solutions that could serve as models for other cities.

Who is affected

  • Detroit residents and community members
  • The city of Detroit as a Black-majority city
  • University of Michigan Detroit Center
  • BridgeDetroit (media partner)
  • Paul Draus and his colleagues at UM Detroit Center
  • Panel experts and community members participating in discussions

What action is being taken

  • The University of Michigan Detroit Center is hosting a series of community meetings focused on grassroots efforts
  • BridgeDetroit is serving as media partner, offering moderators for panels and covering the lessons learned
  • Panel discussions are being held on five topics throughout winter and spring
  • Registration is open for upcoming panel events

Why it matters

  • This series matters because it reframes Detroit from being viewed merely as a site of social and economic problems to being recognized as a source of innovative solutions and strategies. It addresses the democratic challenges Detroit has faced, particularly the loss of political control during bankruptcy and emergency management from 2013-2014, and the ongoing struggles of a Black-majority city within a white-majority state dealing with biased policies, population decline, and economic disinvestment. By highlighting community-driven solutions developed from the ground up, the series demonstrates Detroit's resilience and positions the city as a model for democratic innovation that can offer valuable lessons to other communities facing similar challenges globally.

What's next

  • Police Reform and Community Violence Interventions panel on Thursday, March 19, 2026, from 10 a.m. to noon
  • Final conference on Thursday, April 16, 2026, from 10 a.m. to noon, titled "Detroit's Blueprint for a Green Future: Democracy, Equity and Sustainability"
  • The culminating conference will synthesize insights from previous events and attendees will collaborate to create a "blueprint" for applying Detroit's solutions to global challenges

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com