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by Sarah Brown and Elizabeth Koebele All articles featured in this blog post are free to access until 31 October 2024 It’s that time of year again when course syllabi are updated with fresh research. We hope to make this… Continue reading →
Publicpolicy research is rife with questions about policymaking processes and outcomes. Yet, perhaps none as quintessential as – why do policy actors do what they do? In my recent article published in Policy & Politics, I explore this question… Continue reading →
Publicpolicy research is rife with questions about policymaking processes and outcomes. Yet, perhaps none as quintessential as why do policy actors do what they do? In my recent article published in Policy & Politics, I explore this question through… Continue reading →
In this episode, President of Cover My Mental Health, Joe Feldman talks with the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy about policies addressing mental health care parity and the role of employers in improving access to care.Thank you so much to our generous sponsor for this episode, the Wall Street Journal.
In this episode, Noah McClain, Assistant Professor of Sociology talks with the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy about security and technology vulnerabilities within New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Learn more about the series and other episodes via [link].
In this episode, Noah McClain, Associate Professor of Sociology talks with the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy about security and technology vulnerabilities within New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Learn more about the series and other episodes via [link].
In this episode,Cara Chiaraluce, Santa Clara University Professor of Sociology, talks with the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy about the impact of internet access on health outcomes.This is the sixth episode in our 11-part series, Technology vs. Government, featuring former California State Assemblymember Lloyd Levine.
Dr Joshua Newman and Professor Michael Mintrom introduce the second article – Mapping the Discourse on Evidence-Based Policy, Artificial Intelligence, and the Ethical Practice of Policy Analysis – to be published in the Journal of European PublicPolicy Special Issue ‘The Politics of … Continue reading →
Dr Céline Mavrot, Dr Susanne Hadorn, and Professor Fritz Sager introduce the fifth article – ‘Blood, Sweat, and Cannabis: Real-World Policy Evaluation of Controversial Issues’ – published in the Journal of European PublicPolicy Special Issue ‘The Politics of Policy Analysis’.
by Sarah Brown, Senior Journal Manager In our first highlights collection of 2024, we are delighted to feature three topical open access articles illuminating several different perspectives on feminist politics. All three emphasise the importance of considering intersectionality in politics… Continue reading →
Dr Kennet Lynggaard and Professor Peter Triantafillou introduce the fourth article – ‘Discourse analysis and strategic policy advice: manoeuvring, navigating, and transforming policy’ – to be published in the Journal of European PublicPolicy Special Issue ‘The Politics of Policy Analysis’.
Originally posted on Paul Cairney: Politics & PublicPolicy : Below is the introduction to an article that I wrote for a Special Issue paper on Teaching Policy Analysis for Gestión y Análisis de Políticas Públicas (GAPP).
Bandelow How do individuals form policy preferences? In our recent article, published in Policy & Politics, we argue that individuals’ identification with social groups, and the emotions associated with these groups, can explain why… Continue reading → by Johanna Hornung and Nils C.
Professor Claudio Radaelli introduces the first article – ‘Occupy the semantic space!’ – to be published in the Journal of European PublicPolicy Special Issue ‘The Politics of Policy Analysis’. Radaelli analyses the regulatory reform agenda of international organizations to … Continue reading →
Call for Papers Nonprofits, PublicPolicy, and Migration Crises Guest Editors: Anna Domaradzka, University of Warsaw Shawn Flanigan, San Diego State University Tania Haddad, American University of Beirut Nonprofit Policy Forum invites papers for a special issue on Nonprofits, PublicPolicy, and Migration Crises.
Dr Johanna Hornung introduces the third article – Social identities and deadlocked debates on nuclear energy policy – to be published in the Journal of European PublicPolicy Special Issue ‘The Politics of Policy Analysis’. Hornung uses the issue of energy transitions to … Continue reading →
It is the second of a three-part series of articles on collaborative policymaking. Abstract Systems leadership research rejects the idea that complex policy problems … Continue reading → By Paul Cairney and Claire Toomey, University of Stirling. This post summarises our pre-print in Open Research Europe.
In this episode, Founding Dean of the University of California, Riverside School of PublicPolicy, Anil Deolalikar talks with students about the most pressing challenges the world faces today. In addition to his research, Deolalikar has extensive publicpolicy experience.
In this episode, Founding Dean of the University of California, Riverside School of PublicPolicy, Anil Deolalikar talks with students about the most pressing challenges the world faces today. In addition to his research, Deolalikar has extensive publicpolicy experience.
In this episode, Found Dean of the University of California, Riverside School of PublicPolicy, Anil Deolalikar talks with students about the most pressing challenges the world faces today. In addition to his research, Deolalikar has extensive publicpolicy experience. Learn more about Anil Deolalikar via [link].
In this episode, Found Dean of the University of California, Riverside School of PublicPolicy, Anil Deolalikar talks with students about the most pressing challenges the world faces today. In addition to his research, Deolalikar has extensive publicpolicy experience. Learn more about Anil Deolalikar via [link].
This post summarises a new article by PoPP on the prospects of more effective government in the UK. We present a cautiously optimistic approach, explaining a major gap between government rhetoric and progress, but signalling the potential for many initiatives … Continue reading →
In this episode, the Dean of the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy Anil Deolalikar, and Distinguished Professor of PublicPolicy and Sociology Bruce Link talk with students from the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy about vaccine inequity. Learn more about the series and other episodes via [link].
In this episode, the Dean of the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy Anil Deolalikar, and Distinguished Professor of PublicPolicy and Sociology Bruce Link talk with students from the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy about vaccine inequity. Learn more about the series and other episodes via [link].
In this episode, the Dean of the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy Anil Deolalikar, and Distinguished Professor of PublicPolicy and Sociology Bruce Link talk with students from the UC Riverside School of PublicPolicy about vaccine inequity. Kevin Karami (UCR PublicPolicy Major, Dean’s Ambassador).
In this article, well explore inspiring examples of inclusive engagement done right, highlighting creative initiatives that overcame barriers, amplified underrepresented voices, and ultimately brought people together for a common purpose. Inclusive engagement is core to what we do.
Before becoming a federal employee, she pursued a Bachelor of Arts in English and a Master’s of Science in criminology with a publicpolicy concentration. This article first appeared November 22, 2020. Briana Richardson-Jones serves as a Justice Department (DOJ) program analyst. Image by Ana Krach from Pixabay. Favorite.
There were 12 articles that did not have amendments suggested and we zipped through them. On the articles that did have amendments, they concerned with various things. – Article V – Makeup of the Executive Board in the absence of Council, what representation was the optimal makeup and who votes for them. (I
In her article “ The Innovative State ,” Beth Simone Noveck highlighted an initiative by Chicago’s Department of Public Health. By making it possible to sort the extraneous chaff from the informational wheat, machine learning could enable agencies to deliver both new and better services to the public,” Noveck wrote.
Kettl, author of 25 books and professor emeritus and former dean of the Maryland School of PublicPolicy, we’ve written a new book titled “The Little Guide to Writing for Impact” (Rowman & Littlefield, 2024). Toward that end, in collaboration with one of the smartest men we know, Donald F.
In her article “The Innovative State,” Beth Simone Noveck highlighted an initiative by Chicago’s Department of Public Health. By making it possible to sort the extraneous chaff from the informational wheat, machine learning could enable agencies to deliver both new and better services to the public,” Noveck wrote. Favorite.
This post – based on this article – first appeared in UK in a Changing Europe. See also How can UK Government become more effective? Catherine Durose, John Boswell, Paul Cairney, Sarah Ayres, Ian C Elliott, Matt Flinders, Steve Martin, and … Continue reading →
How many of you are pursuing or have something on your research agenda that you think has implications for publicpolicy?” Make sure that the journal article is relevant to the work the official is doing and include a sentence as to why you’re sending it to them. Everybody raised their hand.
This post first appeared on the Policy & Politics blog. It summarizes an article published in Policy & Politics. Could policy theories help to understand and facilitate the pursuit of equity (or reduction of unfair inequalities)? We are producing a series … Continue reading →
Environmental Where do environmental hazards put public health at risk? Still, publicpolicies around zoning, environmental cleanup and other community planning issues often lead to increased risks in communities where constituents lack a say in policy decisions.
3 The release of the FHFA report has also sparked a flurry of articles, op-eds, and think tank reports either supporting or countering some or all the recommendations. This two-part article argues that the root cause of their need for reform is a fundamental flaw in Congress’ design of GSEs. More political than commercial.
The Philadelphia Inquirer has an article about this, " City finances, including Philadelphia’s, could go bad fast in this economy, bond expert says." From the article: Here are Kozlik’s observations on threats to city finance, many of which fell on his audience like a door slamming shut: Scared borrowers.
Tara Dawson McGuinness describes her work as sitting at the intersection of policy creation, implementation, and citizen and community voices. McGuinness works at New America, a publicpolicy think tank, where she founded the New Practice Lab, a research and design lab focused on family economic security.
Read on to meet the writers who will contribute two articles each month until July. You can begin reading their articles here.) Ben Marglin is a Senior Vice President with Karsun Solutions and has 25 years of experience in public sector management and technology consulting. Follow him on Twitter @GIS_Advocate. Favorite
This article analyzes the arguments for and against the pilot, addressing in some detail specific points related to credit risk, mission alignment, and the adequacy of the private market. The pilot program aimed to provide an alternative to cash-out refi for homeowners to extract equity from their homes.
From the article: In a news release sent out Wednesday, officials said that the organizations’ Boards of Directors will meet on May 1 to start “months-long discussions about how to efficiently provide, fund, and govern public transit.” German VV as the model for DC.
From the article: Kunkel, director of Temple University’s Sport Industry Research Center , is referring to the economic impact enjoyed by hosts of what’s evolved into a three-day-long basketball bacchanal that briefly transforms the cities it touches, and which happens to be coming to Salt Lake City next month.
The core thesis of this two-part article is that the congressional design of GSEs has a fundamental flaw: that subsidies and privileges given to a GSE will inevitably, over time, drift to being used unduly to produce stand-alone profit to benefit their owners and executives, and too little to support its intended mission.
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