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Papers, Books and Chapters: Published or Forthcoming1
at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies

About 283 scholarly papers, chapters and books were published or forthcoming in 2005. Another 133 papers are presently under review and in the revision process. It is also heartening to note that 30 percent of the published or accepted papers in 2005 were joint products of two or more of our faculty or research associates.

James Alm

Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Sally Wallace, co-editors. Taxing the Hard-to-Tax: Lessons from Theory and Practice, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier B.V. – North Holland Publishers, 2005. Within the book, he, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Sally Wallace wrote “The Landscape of the Hard-to-Tax.” He and Jorge Martinez-Vazquez (with Friedrich Schneider) wrote "'Sizing’ the Problem of the Hard-to-Tax.”

Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Mark Rider, co-editors. The Challenges of Tax Reform in the 21st Century, Norwell, Mass.: Springer Science + Business Media, Inc., forthcoming. Within the book, he, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Mark Rider wrote “Thinking about Tax Reform in the Emerging Global Economy.”

and Benno Torgler***. “Estimating the Determinants of Tax Morale,” chapter in Proceedings of the 97th Annual Conference on Taxation, 2004, Minneapolis, Minn.: National Tax Association, pp. 269-274, 2005.

(with Betty R. Jackson and Michael McKee). “The Effects of Communication Among Taxpayers on Compliance,” chapter in The IRS Research Bulletin, Proceedings of the 2004 Internal Revenue Service Research Conference, pp. 37-46, 2005.

(with Hugo López-Castaño). “Payroll Taxes in Colombia,” chapter in Fiscal Reform in Colombia - Problems and Prospects, Richard Bird***, James Poterba and Joel Slemrod (eds.), Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, forthcoming.

“Assessing Fiscal Policies in Puerto Rico,” chapter in Reforming Puerto Rico Economic Policies, Barry Bosworth and Susan Collins (eds.), Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution, forthcoming.

(with Brian Erard). “Estimating the Informal Supplier Tax Gap,” chapter in The IRS Research Bulletin, Proceedings of the 2005 IRS Research Conference, forthcoming.

“The Income Tax Treatment of the Family,” chapter in The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, forthcoming.

(with Mark Skidmore and James Peltier). “Do Motor Fuel Sales-below-cost Laws Lower Prices?” Journal of Urban Economics, Vol. 57, No. 1, pp. 189-211, January 2005.

and Sally Wallace (with Fitzroy Lee). “How Fair? Federal Income Taxation and the Distribution of Income, 1978 to 1998," Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 24, No. 1, pp. 5-22, Winter 2005.

and Mikhail I. Melnik**. “Sales Taxes and the Decision to Purchase Online,” Public Finance Review, Vol. 33, No. 2, pp. 184-212, March 2005.

and Mikhail I. Melnik**. “Taxing the ‘Family’ in the Individual Income Tax,” Public Finance and Management, Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 67-109, 2005.

and Mikhail I. Melnik**. “Reputation, Information Signals, and Willingness to Pay for Heterogeneous Goods in Online Auctions,” Southern Economic Journal, Vol. 72, No. 2, pp. 171-194, 2005.

and Benno Torgler***. “Culture Differences and Tax Morale in the United States and in Europe,” Journal of Economic Psychology, forthcoming.

see also Sally Wallace.

Roy Bahl

and Jorge Martinez-Vazquez. “Fiscal Federalism and Economic Reform in China,” chapter in The Dynamics of Federalism: The Political Economic Reality, T.N. Srinivasan and Jessica Seddon Wallack (eds.), New York, N.Y.: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming.

“How To Approach Comprehensive Tax Reform: Have the Rules of the Game Changed?” chapter in The Challenges of Tax Reform in the 21st Century, James Alm, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, and Mark Rider (eds.), Norwell, Mass.: Springer Science + Business Media, Inc., forthcoming.

“Reaching the Hardest to Tax: Consequences and Possibilities,” chapter in Taxing the Hard-to-Tax: Lessons from Theory and Practice, James Alm, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, and Sally Wallace (eds.), New York, N.Y.: Elsevier/North Holland Publishers, pp. 337-354, January 19, 2005.

(with Joan Youngman), co-editors. Making the Property Tax Work in Developing Countries, Cambridge, Mass.: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, forthcoming.

see also Sally Wallace.

Jameson Boex

and Jorge Martinez-Vazquez. Local Government Finance Reform in Developing Countries: The Case of Tanzania, New York, N.Y.: Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming.

and Jorge Martinez-Vazquez. “Designing Intergovernmental Equalization Transfers with Imperfect Data: Concepts, Practices, and Lessons,” chapter in Challenges in the Design of Fiscal Equalization and Intergovernmental Transfers, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Robert Searle (eds.), forthcoming.

see also Jorge Martinez-Vazquez.

Carolyn Bourdeaux

“A Question of Genesis: An Analysis of the Determinants of Public Authorities,” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, Vol. 15, No. 3, pp. 441-462, July 2005.

“Re-examining Public Authority Efficacy,” Administration & Society, forthcoming.

“Conflict, Accommodation, and Bargaining: The Implications of Structural Devolution for Handling Controversial Policy-Making," Governance, forthcoming.

“Do Legislatures Matter in Budgetary Reform?” Public Budgeting & Finance, forthcoming.

and John Matthews*. “Georgia’s Redevelopment Powers Law: A Guide to the Evaluation and Use of Tax Allocation Districts,” State Tax Notes [special report], December 12, 2005.

James C. Cox

(with Stephen C. Hayne). “When Does an Incentive for Free Riding Promote Rational Bidding?” chapter in Experimental Business Research, Vol. 2, Rami Zwick and Amnon Rapoport (eds.), New York, N.Y.: Springer, 2005.

(with Cary A. Deck). “On the Nature of Reciprocal Motives,” Economic Inquiry, Vol. 43, pp. 623-635, 2005.

wrote the chapters “Preference Reversals,” “Utility Maximization” and “First Price Independent Private Values Auctions”; (with Ronald L. Oaxaca) “Experimetrics: The Use of Market Experiments to Evaluate the Performance of Econometric Estimators” and “Finite Horizon Job Search”; and (with R. Mark Isaac) “Procurement Contracting” and “Experiments in Decentralized Monopoly Restraint” in Handbook of Experimental Economics Results, Vol. 1, Charles R. Plott and Vernon L. Smith (eds.), New York, N.Y.: Elsevier Press, 2005.

and J. Todd Swarthout. “EconPort: Creating and Maintaining a Knowledge Commons,” chapter in Understanding Knowledge as a Commons: From Theory to Practice, Charlotte Hess and Elinor Ostrom (eds.), Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, forthcoming.

and Vjollca Sadiraj***. “Small- and Large-Stakes Risk Aversion: Implications of Concavity Calibration for Decision Theory,” Games and Economic Behavior, forthcoming.

(with Cary A. Deck). “The Impact of Trembling on Behavior in the Trust Game,” Southern Economic Journal, forthcoming.

(with Daniel Zeng and Moshe Dror). “Coordination of Purchasing and Bidding Activities Across Posted Offer and Auction Markets,” Journal of Information Systems and e-Business Management, forthcoming.

(with Amar Cheema, et al.). “Economics, Psychology, and Social Dynamics of Consumer Bidding in Auctions,” Marketing Letters, Vol. 16, 2005.

“Trust, Fear, Reciprocity, and Altruism: Theory and Experiment,” chapter in International Conference on Experiments in Economic Sciences: New Approaches to Solving Real-world Problems, New York, N.Y.: Springer-Verlag, forthcoming.

Ronald G. Cummings

See Paul J. Ferraro.

See Jorge Martinez-Vazquez.

Robert J. Eger III

(with Uk Heo). “Paying for Security: The Political Economy of U.S. Military Spending,” Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 49, No. 5, pp. 792-817, October 2005.

(with Merl Hackbart). “Road Fund Tax Compliance: An Analysis of Enhancement Strategies,” Public Budgeting & Finance, Vol. 25, No. 1, pp. 66-83, Spring 2005.

“Casting Light on Shadow Government: A Typological Approach,” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, forthcoming.

and Hai David Guo*. “Financing Infrastructure: Fixed Price v. Price Index Contracts,” Journal of Public Procurement, forthcoming.

(with Sharon Cox). “Procedural Complexity of Tax Administration: The Road Fund Case,” Journal of Public Budgeting, Accounting, and Financial Management, forthcoming.

(with Deborah A. Carroll and Justin Marlowe). “Generational Differences and Perceptions of Board Members: The Case for Situational Leadership Theory in Municipal Management Research,” International Journal of Public Administration, forthcoming.

(with Douglas Ihrke). “Reinventing in the American Cities: The City Executive’s Perspective,” International Journal of Public Administration, forthcoming.

“Provision and Production of Public Goods,” chapter in Handbook of Public Sector Economics, Donijo Robbins (ed.), New York, N.Y.: Marcell Dekker, 2005.

"An Analysis of Revenues in the Chattahoochee Hill Country for Incorporation," Fiscal Research Center Report, Atlanta, Ga.: Georgia State University, 2005.

"Feasibility Study Of Comprehensive Maintenance Contracting In GDOT," Georgia Department of Transportation Study, Atlanta, Ga., 2005.

"An Analysis of the Expected Revenues and Expenditures for an Incorporated Sandy Springs," Fiscal Research Center Report, Atlanta, Ga.: Georgia State University, 2005.

Paul G. Farnham

(with Stephanie L. Sansom, John E. Anderson, Kenneth Dominguez, Sada Soorapanth, Jill Clark, Thom Sukalac, Mary Jo Earp, Beverly Bohannon, Mary Glenn Fowler, and the PSD Consortium). “Updated Estimates of Health Care Utilization and Costs Among Perinatally HIV-Infected Children,” Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, forthcoming.

Paul J. Ferraro

(with Philip J. Nyhus, Steven A. Osofsky, Hank Fischer and Francine Madden). "Bearing the Costs of Human-Wildlife Conflict: The Challenges of Compensation Schemes," chapter in People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence? Rosie Woodroffe, Simon Thirgood and Alan Rabinowitz (eds.), Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2005.

and Ronald G. Cummings. “Elucidating Conflict Over Natural Resources: An Experimental Approach," chapter in Using Experimental Methods in Environmental and Resource Economics, John List (ed.), Northampton, Mass.: Edward Elgar Publishing, forthcoming.

"Integrating Biophysical and Economic Information to Guide Land Conservation Investments," chapter in Economic Advances in Land Use Policy: Implications of Emerging Research for Conservation of Farm, Forest, and Rural Character, Robert Johnson and Stephen Swallow (eds.), Washington, D.C.: Resources for the Future Press, forthcoming.

(with Heidi J. Albers). "Economics of Biodiversity Conservation in Developing Countries," chapter in New Policy Options for Sustainable Development, Michael Toman and Ramón Lopez (eds.), Columbia University, forthcoming. 

(with S. Cotton and Christian A. Vossler). "Can Public Goods Experiments Inform Policy? Reducing Confusion among Experimental Subjects," chapter in Experimental Methods, Environmental Economics, Todd Cherry and Jason Shogren (eds.), Oxford, U.K.: Routledge, forthcoming. 

was a contributing author to Chapter 6, Responses Working Group position of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, MEA, 2005. The MEA is a four-year, $21 million undertaking intended to produce a comprehensive view of the state and management of the planet's ecological resources.

(with R. David Simpson). "Cost-Effective Conservation: A Review of What Works to Preserve Biodiversity," 2001, will be included as a chapter in the revised edition of the Resources for the Future Reader in Environmental Policy and Resource Management, Wallace E. Oates (ed.), Washington, D.C.: Resources for the Future Press, forthcoming.

and Toshihiro Uchida** (with Jon M. Conrad). "Price Premiums for Eco-friendly Commodities: Are ‘Green’ Markets the Best Way to Protect Endangered Ecosystems?” Environmental and Resource Economics, Vol. 32, No. 3, pp. 419-438, 2005.

and Laura O. Taylor. "Do Economists Recognize an Opportunity Cost When They See One? A Dismal Performance from the Dismal Science," Contributions to Economic Analysis & Policy, Vol. 4, No. 1, Article 7, 2005.

(with R. David Simpson). "Cost-Effective Conservation When Eco-entrepreneurs have Market Power," Environment and Development Economics, Vol. 10, No. 5, pp. 651-663, 2005.

"Corruption and Conservation: The Need for Empirical Analyses," Oryx – The International Journal of Conservation, Vol. 39, pp. 257-259, 2005.

(with R. David Simpson). "Protecting Forests and Biodiversity: Are Investments in Eco-friendly Production Activities the Best Way to Protect Endangered Ecosystems and Enhance Rural Livelihoods?" Forests, Trees and Livelihoods, Vol. 15, No. 2, pp. 2-10, 2005.

(with Subhrendu K. Pattanayak). "Money for Nothing? A Call for Empirical Evaluation of Biodiversity Conservation Investments," PLoS Biology, forthcoming.

Chiara Franzoni***

(with M. Calderini). "Patenting in Public Research: An Evidence-Based Reflection on IPRs and the Basic-Applied Research Trade-off,” chapter in Technical Change and Economic Catch-up: The Role of Science and Multinationals, Grazia D. Santangelo (ed.), New Horizons in the Economics of Innovation series, Cheltenham, England, U.K.: Edward Elgar Publishing, November 2005.

"Opportunity Recognition in Technology Transfer Organizations: Five Case Studies from U.K. and Italy,” International Entrepreneurship and Management Journal, forthcoming.

Shiferaw Gurmu

(both with Christopher T. King and Peter R. Mueser). “Job Stability for Welfare Recipients: A Comparison of Matched Job Spells,” Chapter 4, and “Explaining Job Stability for Welfare Recipients,” Chapter 5 in Welfare and Work Experiences in Six Cities, Christopher T. King and Peter R. Mueser (eds.), Kalamazoo, Mich.: W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2005.

see also Paula E. Stephan.

Carol D. Hansen

“Grounded Theory Research Methods,” Chapter 15 in Research in Organizations: Foundational Principles, Processes and Methods of Inquiry, Richard A. Swanson and Elwood F. Holton III (eds.), San Francisco, Calif.: Berrett-Koehler, pp. 265-280, 2005.

, Kathryn S. O’Neill** and Gary L. May**. “Interpersonal Communication Skills Training as a Cultural Intervention: Three Theoretical Frames,” chapter in Gender and Organizational Theory Series: Gender and Communication at Work, Mary Barrett and Marilyn J. Davidson (eds.), Brookfield, Vt.: Ashgate Publishing Ltd., forthcoming.

(with Y. Lee). "Taoism and Reversalism: Alternative Perspectives on Speed and Career Development," Proceedings of the European Group for Organizational Studies, Berlin, Germany, 2005.

Gary T. Henry

, Craig C. Gordon** and Dana K. Rickman. “Early Education Policy Alternatives: Comparing the Quality and Outcomes of Head Start and State Pre-Kindergarten,” Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, forthcoming.

and Craig C. Gordon**. “Competition in the Sandbox: A Test of the Effects of Preschool Competition on Educational Outcomes,” Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, forthcoming.

and Dana K. Rickman. “Effects of Peers on Early Education Outcomes,” Economics of Education Review, forthcoming.

“In Pursuit of Social Betterment: A Proposal to Evaluate the Da Vinci Learning Model,” New Directions for Evaluation: Special Issue on Theorists’ Models in Action, Marvin C. Alkin and Christina A. Christie (eds.), No. 106, pp. 47-63, Summer 2005.

(with Marvin C. Alkin, Christina A. Christie, Jennifer C. Greene, Stewart I. Donaldson and Jean A. King). “The Reality of Unreal Situations: Caveats and Insights,” New Directions for Evaluation Special Issue on Theorists’ Models in Action, Marvin C. Alkin and Christina A. Christie (eds.), No. 106, pp. 99-109, Summer 2005.

and Andrew J. Mashburn. “Assessing School Readiness: Validity and Bias in Preschool and Kindergarten Teachers’ Ratings,” Educational Measurement: Issues and Practices, Vol. 23, No. 4, pp. 16-30, 2005.

Julie L. Hotchkiss

"Do Husbands and Wives Pool Their Resources? Further Evidence," Journal of Human Resources, Vol. 40, pp. 519-31, Spring 2005.

(with M. Melinda Pitts). "Female Labor Force Intermittency and Current Earnings: A Switching Regression Model with Unknown Sample Selection," Applied Economics, Vol. 37, pp. 545-60, March 2005.

(with Christopher T. King and Peter R. Mueser). "Determinants of Welfare Exit and Employment," chapter in Welfare and Work: Experiences in Six Cities, Christopher T. King and Peter R. Mueser (eds.), Kalamazoo, Mich.: W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2005.

(with John C. Robertson, Jason DeBacker and M. Melinda Pitts). "Earnings of Workers in the Information Technology Industry: Importance of Occupation and Human Capital," Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Economic Review, pp. 37-45, Third Quarter, 2005.

"Employment Growth and Labor Force Participation: How Many Jobs are Enough?" Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Economic Review, pp. 1-13, First Quarter, 2005.

"Economics 101: Demand & Supply," EconSouth, pp. 1-2, First Quarter, 2005.

see also Bruce E. Kaufman.

Janet L. Johnson

and Christopher Horne** (with David M. Van Slyke). “Do Charitable Donors Know Enough—and Care Enough—About Government Subsidies to Affect Private Giving to Nonprofit Organizations?”  Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, Vol. 34, No. 1, pp. 136-149, March 2005.

and Christopher Horne** (with David M. Van Slyke). “Charitable Choice Implementation: What Public Managers Should Know About Public Opinion and the Potential Impact of Government Funding on Private Giving,” International Journal of Public Administration, forthcoming.

(with David M. Van Slyke). “Linking Individual Volunteering and Giving: Nonprofit Management Strategies for Enhancing Organizational Performance,” Public Performance and Management Review, forthcoming.

William M. Kahnweiler

(with Jennifer B. Kahnweiler). Shaping Your HR Role: Succeeding in Today’s Organizations, Butterworth Heinemann/Elsevier, 2005.

“The Development of OD Careers: A Preliminary Framework for Enacting What We Preach,” Organization Development Journal, forthcoming.

(with Janet Z. Burns). “Frederick Lewis Otte: The Consummate Human Resource Developer,” Human Resource Development Quarterly, forthcoming.

Bruce E. Kaufman

Managing the Human Factor: The Birth and Development of Corporate Personnel and Industrial Relations Programs in American Industry, Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, forthcoming.

(with James Bennett), co-editors. What Do Unions Do? A Twenty-Year Perspective, New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Press, forthcoming.

(with David Lewin), co-editors. Advances in Industrial and Labor Relations, Vol. 14, New York, N.Y.: Elsevier, 2005.

and Julie L. Hotchkiss. The Economics of Labor Markets, 7th Edition, Cincinnati, Ohio: Thompson-Southwestern, 2005. 

“Integrating Emotions into Economic Theory,” Handbook of Behavioral Economics, Morris Altman (ed.), Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, forthcoming.

“Wisconsin and the Rise and Decline of the Field of Industrial Relations,” chapter in The History of the Industrial Relations Research Institute at the University of Wisconsin, Lee Hansen (ed.), forthcoming.

“Chicago and the Development of Twentieth Century Labor Economics,” chapter in The Elgar Companion to the Chicago School of Economics, Ross Emmett, (ed.), Aldershot, Vt.: Edward Elgar Publishing, forthcoming.

“The Development of the Human Resource Management Field in Historical and International Perspective,” chapter in International Handbook of Human Resource Management, Peter Boxall, John Purcell, and Patrick Wright (eds.), Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press, forthcoming.

"Labor Institutionalism and Industrial Relations: A Century of Boom and Bust,” Labor History, forthcoming.

(with Daphne Taras). “Nonunion Employee Representation in North America: Diversity, Controversy, and Uncertain Future,” Industrial Relations Journal, forthcoming.

“The Global Evolution of the Field of Industrial Relations,” chapter in Proceedings of the 2005 Meeting of the Association of Industrial Relations Academics of Australia and New Zealand, Sydney, Australia: University of Sydney, forthcoming.

“The Social Welfare Objectives and Ethical Principles of Industrial Relations,” chapter in The Ethics of Human Resources and Industrial Relations, John Budd and James Scoville (eds.), Champaign, Ill.: Labor and Employment Relations Association, pp. 23-60, 2005.

“Historical Insights: The Early Institutionalists on Trade Unionism and Labor Policy,” Journal of Labor Research, pp. 1-32, Winter 2005.

“What Do Unions Do? Evaluation and Commentary,” Journal of Labor Research, pp. 555-96, Fall 2005.

“Clark Kerr and the Founding of the Berkeley IIR: A Celebratory Remembrance,” Industrial Relations, pp. 405-15, July 2005.

Glenn M. Landers

, David Sjoquist, Sally Wallace, and Angelino Viceisza* (with Claire Ritchie). Georgia's Aging Population: What to Expect and How to Cope, Fiscal Research Center Report, September 2005.

“Peer Support Programs for the Elderly in Georgia,” Issue Brief, Georgia Health Policy Center, August 2005.

"Georgia's Indigent Care Trust Fund Expands Access for the Uninsured," Issue Brief, Georgia Health Policy Center, March 2005.

and Sally Wallace (with Clare Ritchie). “Georgia’s Growing Elderly Population and Revenue Growth,” The Fiscal Impact, No. 2, Atlanta, Ga.: Georgia State University, January 31, 2005.

and Sally Wallace (with Clare Ritchie). "Budgetary Implications of Georgia’s Aging Population,” The Fiscal Impact, No. 3, Atlanta, Ga.: Georgia State University, January 31, 2005.

"Georgia's Foster Care Program and the Medicaid System," Issue Brief, Georgia Health Policy Center, January 2005.

Susan K. Laury

and Laura O. Taylor. “Altruism Spillovers: Are Behaviors in Context-free Experiments Predictive of Altruism Toward a Naturally Occurring Public Good?” Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, forthcoming.

(with Charles Holt). “Risk Aversion and Incentive Effects: New Data without Order Effects,” American Economic Review, Vol. 95, No. 3, June 2005.

and Sally Wallace. “Confidentiality and Taxpayer Compliance,” National Tax Journal, Vol. 58, September 2005.

and Sally Wallace. “Does Confidentiality Affect Taxpayer Behavior?” IRS Research Conference Proceedings, forthcoming.

(with Charles Holt). “Theoretical Explanations of Treatment Effects in Voluntary Contributions Experiments,” “Voluntary Provision of Public Goods: Experimental Results with Interior Nash Equilibria” and “Payoff Scale Effects and Risk Preference Under Real and Hypothetical Conditions,” three chapters in The Handbook of Experimental Economics Results, Vol. 1, Charles R. Plott and Vernon Smith (eds.), forthcoming.

see also Sally Wallace.

Gregory B. Lewis

“Same-Sex Marriage and the 2004 Presidential Election,” P.S.: Political Science & Politics, Vol. 38, pp. 195-199, April 2005.

and Zhenhua Hu*. “Information Technology Workers in the Federal Service: More than a Quiet Crisis?” Review of Public Personnel Administration, Vol. 25, pp. 207-224, September 2005.

(with Arthur C. Brooks). “A Question of Morality: Artists’ Values and Public Funding for the Arts,” Public Administration Review, Vol. 65, pp. 8-17, January/February 2005.

“Re-Framing the Arts as Morality Policy? The Impact on Public Opinion,” Policy Studies Journal, forthcoming.

"The Demographics of Georgia I: Lesbian and Gay Couples," Fiscal Research Center Brief, No. 113, September 2005.

Deon Locklin

Leading and Managing Change in the Public Vocational Rehabilitation Program, monograph written while serving as an Institute on Rehabilitation Issues (IRI) Scholar, Fayetteville, Ark.: University of Arkansas, forthcoming.

Jorge Martinez-Vazquez

(with Robert Searle), co-editors. The Challenges in the Design of Fiscal Equalization and Intergovernmental Transfers, forthcoming. Within this book, he wrote (with Robert Searle) the chapter “The Design of Conditional Grants.“

and José Félix Sanz***. “Las Claves de la Futura Reforma Fiscal,” Expansión, January 4-5, 2005.

and Mark Rider. “Multiple Modes of Tax Evasion: Theory and Evidence,” National Tax Journal, Vol. 58, No. 1, pp. 51-76, March 2005.

and Mark Rider. “Fiscal Decentralization and Economic Growth: A Comparative Study of China and India,” Journal of Indian Economics and Business, forthcoming.

and Jameson Boex. "The Determinants of the Incidence of Intergovernmental Grants: A Survey of the International Experience," Public Finance and Management, Vol. 4, No. 4, 2005.

and Ronald G. Cummings (with Michael McKee). “A Portfolio Approach to Tax Evasion: Experimental Evidence,” Public Finance Review, forthcoming.

, Richard Bird*** and Benno Torgler***. “Tax Performance in Developing Countries: The Role of Demand Factors,” Proceedings of the National Tax Association, 2005.

, Andrey Timofeev and Jameson Boex. “An Assessment of the Recent Sub-Federal Fiscal Reforms in the Russian Federation,” Proceedings of the 97th Annual Conference on Taxation, National Tax Association, pp. 39-46, Fall 2005.

, Andrey Timofeev and Jameson Boex. "Reforming Regional-Local Finances in Russia," Washington, D.C.: World Bank Institute Learning Resources Series, 2005.

, Mark Rider, and Sally Wallace. Tax Reform in the Russian Federation during the Transition Years, New York, N.Y.: Springer-Verlag, forthcoming.

, Jameson Boex and Javier Arze del Granado**, co-editors. Fighting Corruption in the Public Sector, forthcoming.

(with Charles McLure and Francois Vaillancourt). “Revenues and Expenditures in an Intergovernmental Framework,” chapter in Intergovernmental Reform in Russia from a Comparative Perspective, Richard Bird*** and Francois Vaillancourt (eds.), Washington, D.C.: The World Bank Institute Learning Series, 2005.

, Richard Bird*** and Benno Torgler***. “Societal Institutions and Tax Effort in Developing Countries,” chapter in The Challenges of Tax Reform in the 21st Century, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and James Alm (eds.), Norwell, Mass.: Springer Science + Business Media, Inc., forthcoming.

“China’s Long March to Decentralization” and (with Robert McNab) “Fiscal Decentralization and Governance,” chapters in The Political Economy of Decentralization, E. Gomez, George Peterson, and Paul Smoke (eds.), London: Edward-Elgar, forthcoming.

see also James Alm.

see also Roy Bahl.

see also Jameson Boex.

see also Sally Wallace.

Mikhail I. Melnik**

See James Alm.

Robert E. Moore

and Sasatra Sudsawasd**. "Investment under Trade Policy Uncertainty: An Empirical Investigation," Review of International Economics, forthcoming.

Harvey K. Newman

“Alligators in the Regime: A Craft for Navigating the Swamp,” chapter in Alligators in the Swamp: Power, Ministry and Leadership, George B. Thompson, Jr., (ed.), Cleveland, Ohio: Pilgrim Press, 2005.

“Race and the Tourist Bubble,” chapter in American Urban Politics: The Reader, 4th Edition, Dennis R. Judd and Paul Kantor (eds.), New York, N.Y.: Allyn & Bacon/Longman Publishers, 2005.

(with Michael Tevesz). “The City Worships,” chapter in Introduction to Urban Studies, 3rd Edition, Roberta Steinbacher and Virginia O. Benson (eds.), Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, forthcoming.

(with David M. Van Slyke). “Venture Philanthropy and Social Entrepreneurship in Community Redevelopment,” Journal of Nonprofit Management and Leadership, forthcoming.

Lloyd G. Nigro

(with J. Edward Kellough), co-editors. Civil Service Reform in the States, Ithaca, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 2005. Within this book, he wrote (with J. Edward Kellough) the chapters “Civil Service Reform in Georgia” and “The Future of Civil Service Reform.”

"Public Personnel Management and the Challenges of Democratic Governance," chapter in Public Personnel Management: Current Concerns, Future Challenges, 4th Edition, Norma Riccucci (ed.), New York, N.Y.: Allyn & Bacon/Longman Publishers, pp. 1-15, forthcoming.

(with J. Edward Kellough). "Dramatic Reform in the Public Service: At-Will Employment and the Creation of a New Public Workforce," Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, forthcoming.

and William L. Waugh, Jr. “The Human Resource Perspective on Workplace Violence,” chapter in Handbook of Strategic Public Personnel Administration: Building Human Capital for the New Millennium, Ali Farazmand (ed.), Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, forthcoming.

Klara Sabirianova Peter

(with Yuriy Gorodnichenko). “Returns to Schooling in Russia and Ukraine: A Semiparametric Approach to Cross-Country Comparative Analysis,” Journal of Comparative Economics, Vol. 33, pp. 324-350, June 2005.

(with Belton Fleisher and Xiaojun Wang). “Returns to Skills and the Speed of Reforms: Evidence from Central and Eastern Europe, China, and Russia,” Journal of Comparative Economics, Vol. 33, pp. 351-370, June 2005.

(with Jan Svejnar and Katherine Terrell). “Distance to the Efficiency Frontier and Foreign Direct Investment Spillovers,” Journal of the European Economic Association Papers and Proceedings, Vol. 3, No. 2-3, pp. 576-586, April-May 2005.

Ragan Petrie

(with Jean-Paul Chavas and Michael J. Roth). “Farm Household Production Inefficiency in the Gambia: Resource Constraints and Market Failures,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics, Vol. 87, No. 1, pp. 160-179, 2005.

David W. Pitts

(with J. Edward Kellough). “Who Submits to PAR? Examining the Characteristics of Authors who Submit Manuscripts to the Journal,” Public Administration Review, Vol. 65, No. 1, January/February 2005.

“Leadership, Empowerment, and Public Organizations,” Review of Public Personnel Administration, Vol. 25, No. 1, March 2005.

“Diversity, Representation, and Performance: Evidence about Race and Ethnicity in Public Organizations,” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, Vol. 15, No. 4, October 2005.

(with Sergio Fernandez). "Under What Conditions do Public Managers Pursue and Favor Organizational Change?" American Review of Public Administration, forthcoming.

“Modeling the Impact of Diversity Management,” Review of Public Personnel Administration, forthcoming.

see also Gregory Streib.

Theodore H. Poister

“Strategic Planning and Management in State Departments of Transportation,” International Journal of Public Administration, Vol. 28, Nos. 13 & 14, pp. 1035-56, 2005.

and Gregory Streib. “Elements of Strategic Planning and Management in Municipal Government: Status after Two Decades,” Public Administration Review, Vol. 65, No. 1, pp. 45-56, January/February 2005.

(with David L. Margolis and Douglas E. Zimmerman). “Strategic Management at the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation: A Results-Driven Approach,” Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board, No. 1885, pp. 56-64, January 10, 2005. 

“Performance Measurement in State Transportation Departments," chapter in The Handbook of Transportation Policy and Administration, Jeremy Plant (ed.), New York, N.Y.: Marcel Dekker, Inc., forthcoming.

see also Christine H. Roch.

Inas Rashad

“Structural Estimation of Caloric Intake, Exercise, Smoking and Obesity,”  Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, forthcoming.

“Whose Fault is it We’re Getting Fat? Obesity in the United States,” Public Policy Research, Vol. 12, No. 1, pp. 30-36, March 2005.

(with Michael Eriksen). “Do Sprawling Counties in Georgia Adversely Affect Health? A Focus on Obesity and Cancer,” Urban-Rural Interfaces Conference Proceedings, pp. 299-305, August 2005.

Mark Rider

See James Alm.

See Jorge Martinez-Vazquez.

See Sally Wallace.

Felix Rioja

“Roads versus Schooling: Growth Effects of Government Choices,” Topics in Macroeconomics, Vol. 5, No. 1, 2005.

Christine H. Roch

“The Dual Roots of Opinion Leadership,” The Journal of Politics, Vol. 67, No. 1, pp. 110-131, 2005.

and Theodore H. Poister. “Citizens, Accountability, and Service Satisfaction: The Influence of Expectations,” Urban Affairs Review, forthcoming.

see also Gregory Streib.

Michael Rushton

“Economic Analysis of Freedom of Expression,” Georgia State University Law Review, Vol. 21, No. 3, Spring 2005.

“Support for Earmarked Public Spending on Culture: Evidence from a Referendum in Metropolitan Detroit,” Public Budgeting and Finance, Vol. 25, No. 4, December 2005.

“Tax Structure Revisited: Comment,” chapter in The Challenges of Tax Reform in a Global Economy, James Alm, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, and Mark Rider (eds.), New York, N.Y.: Springer, forthcoming.

(with Arthur Brooks). “Government Funding of Nonprofit Organizations,” chapter in Financing Nonprofits: Bridging Theory and Practice, Dennis R. Young (ed.), Lanham, Md.: Altamira Press, forthcoming.

Vjollca Sadiraj***

(with Jan Tuinstra and Frans Van Winden). "Interest Group Size Dynamics and Policymaking," Public Choice, Vol. 125, No. 3-4, pp. 271-303, December 2005.

see also James C. Cox.

Bruce A. Seaman

“Empirical Studies of Demand for the Performing Arts,” Chapter 14 in The Economics of Arts and Culture, Victor Ginsburgh and David Throsby (eds.), Handbooks in Economics Series, Amsterdam: North-Holland Elsevier, forthcoming.

David L. Sjoquist

(with Catherine Freeman and Benjamin Scafidi). “Racial Segregation in Georgia Public Schools, 1994-2001: Trends, Causes and Impact on Teacher Quality,” chapter in School Resegregation: Must the South Turn Back?, Jack Boger, Chris Edley, and Gary Orfield (eds.), Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, pp. 148-163, 2005.

(with W. Bartley Hildreth and Matthew N. Murray). “Interstate Tax Uniformity and the Multistate Tax Commission,” National Tax Journal, pp. 575-590, September 2005.

“Reforming the Tax Rate Structure of the Jamaican Land Value Tax,” Public Finance Review, forthcoming.

“The Land Value Tax in Jamaica: An Analysis of Options for Reform,” Bulletin for International Fiscal Documentation, pp. 489-497, November 2005.

(with Benjamin Scafidi and Todd Stinebrickner). “The Impact of Wages and School Characteristics on Teacher Mobility and Retention,” Economics of Education Review, forthcoming.

(with Gary C. Cornia and Lawrence C. Walters). “Sales and Use Tax Simplification and Voluntary Compliance,” State Tax Notes, Vol. 36, No. 13, pp. 989-1009, June 27, 2005.

(with W. Bartley Hildreth and Matthew N. Murray). “The Multistate Tax Commission and Corporate Tax Uniformity,” State Tax Notes, Vol. 38, No. 11, pp. 827-862, December 5, 2005.

“Roy Bahl: The Early Years,” State Tax Notes, Vol. 38, No. 18, forthcoming.

see also Glenn M. Landers.

see also Mary Beth Walker.

see also Sally Wallace.

Paula E. Stephan

(with Ronald Ehrenberg), co-editors. Science and the University, Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press, forthcoming. Within this book, she wrote (with Ronald Ehrenberg) the Introduction, with Grant C. Black** “The Importance of Foreign Ph.D. Students to U.S. Science" and (with Sharon Levin) “Foreign Scholars in U.S. Science: Contributions and Costs.”

(with Jennifer Ma). “The Increased Frequency and Duration of the Postdoctorate Career Stage,” American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings, Vol. 95, pp. 71-75, May 2005.

(with Jennifer Ma). “The Growing Postdoctorate Population at U.S. Research Universities," chapter in Recruitment, Retention and Retirement in Higher Education, Robert Clark and Jennifer Ma (eds.), Northampton, Mass.: Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 53-79, 2005.

, Albert J. Sumell** and Grant C. Black** (with James D. Adams). “Firm Placements of New Ph.D.'s: Implications for Knowledge Transfer," chapter in The Role of Labour Mobility and Informal Networks for Knowledge Transfer, Dirk Fornahl, Christian Zellner and David Audretsch (eds.), New York, N.Y.: Springer, pp. 125-146, 2005.

, Shiferaw Gurmu, Albert J. Sumell** and Grant C. Black**.  “Who’s Patenting in the University? Evidence from the Survey of Doctorate Recipients," Economics of Innovation and New Technology, forthcoming.

(with Sharon Levin). “Leaving Careers in IT: Gender Differences in Retention,” Journal of Technology Transfer, Vol. 30, pp. 383-396, 2005.

“Job Market Effects on Scientific Productivity,” chapter in Scientific Competition: Theory and Policy, Max Albert (ed.), Saarbrucken, Germany: University of Saarbrucken Press, forthcoming.

and Grant C. Black**. “Bioinformatics Training Programs are Hot but the Labor Market is Not,” Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, Vol. 33, pp. 58-62, 2005.

and Grant C. Black** (with James D. Adams and J. Roger Clemmons). “Scientific Teams and Institutional Collaborations: Evidence from U.S. Universities, 1981-1999," Research Policy, Vol. 34, pp. 259-285, 2005.

Gregory Streib

and David W. Pitts. “Human Resource Management,” chapter in Managing Small Cities and Counties: A Practical Guide, Carl Stenberg (ed.), International City-County Management Association, forthcoming.

and Ignacio Navarro*. “Citizen Demand for Interactive E-Government: The Case of Georgia Consumer Services,” American Review of Public Administration, forthcoming.

(with J. Edwin Benton, et al.). “Conducting Research on Counties in the 21st Century: A New Agenda and Database Considerations,” Public Administration Review, forthcoming.

and Ignacio Navarro* (with Mark Rivera). “Performance on the ICMA Applied Knowledge Assessment: Trends and Patterns,” The Municipal Yearbook 2005, Washington, D.C.: ICMA, pp. 34-40, 2005.

“Quantifying the Knowledge of Public Management Professionals: Developing a Knowledge Assessment Tool for Local Government Managers,” Public Performance and Management Review, Vol. 28, No. 3, pp. 418-436, 2005.

and Christine Roch. “Strengthening Public Administration Research: Barriers and Horizons," International Journal of Public Administration, Vol. 28, No. 1-2, pp. 37-55, 2005.

and Atef Ghobrial. “Assessing the Effects of September 11 Events on Flight Training,” Journal of Aviation/Aerospace Education & Research, Vol. 14, No. 3, pp. 31-44, 2005.

, Katherine Willoughby, Samira Outler* and Jason P. Lee*. “Identity Theft and Georgia Citizens: Threats Posed and Possible Solutions,” Georgia Governor’s Office of Consumer Affairs Report, December 19, 2005.

see also John C. Thomas.

see also Theodore H. Poister.

see also William L. Waugh Jr.

see also Katherine Willoughby.

J. Todd Swarthout

See James C. Cox.

Laura O. Taylor

“Experimental Methods for the Testing and Design of Contingent Valuation,” chapter in Contingent Valuation Handbook, Anna Alberini and James R. Kahn (eds.), Northampton, Mass.: Edward Elgar Publishing, forthcoming.

see also Paul J. Ferraro.

see also Susan K. Laury.

Erdal Tekin

“Child Care Subsidy Receipt, Employment, and Child Care Choices of Single Mothers,” Economics Letters, Vol. 89, No. 1, pp. 1-6, October 2005.

(with David Blau). “The Determinants and Consequences of Child Care Subsidies for Single Mothers,” Journal of Population Economics, forthcoming.

(with Naci Mocan). “Guns and Juvenile Crime,” Journal of Law and Economics, forthcoming.

(with Naci Mocan). “Drug Use and Juvenile Crime: Evidence from a Panel of Siblings and Twins,” chapter in Substance Use: Individual Behavior, Social Interactions, Markets, and Politics, Bjorn Lindgren and Michael Grossman (eds.), Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 91-120, 2005.

John Clayton Thomas

and Christopher Horne** (with David M. Van Slyke). “The Implications of Public Opinion for Public Managers: The Case of Charitable Choice,” Administration & Society, Vol. 37, pp. 321-344, July 2005.

(with David Edwards). “Developing a Municipal Performance Measurement System: Reflections on the Atlanta Dashboard,” Public Administration Review, Vol. 65, pp. 369-376, May/June 2005.

and Gregory Streib. “E-Democracy, E-Commerce, and E-Research: Examining the Electronic Ties Between Citizens and Governments,” Administration & Society, Vol. 37, pp. 259-280, July 2005.

“Outcome Assessment and Program Evaluation,” Chapter 16 in The Jossey-Bass Handbook of Nonprofit Leadership and Management, 2nd Edition, Robert D. Herman and Associates (eds.), San Francisco, Calif.: Jossey-Bass Publishers, pp. 391-416, 2005.

Andrey Timofeev

See Jorge Martinez-Vazquez.

Geoffrey K. Turnbull

(with Jonathan Dombrow). “Spatial Competition and Shopping Externalities,” Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, forthcoming.

“Government Form and Performance: Fiscal Illusion and Production Cost in U.S. Counties,” Southern Economic Journal, forthcoming.

(with William J. Moore and Robert J. Newman). “The Experience-Earnings Profile: Productivity-Augmenting or Purely Contractual? Evidence from the U.K.,” Journal of Labor Research, forthcoming.

(with Joseph T.L. Ooi and C.F. Sirmans). “Price Formation under Small Numbers Competition: Evidence from Land Auctions in Singapore,” Real Estate Economics, forthcoming.

(with Chris Papageorgiou). “Economic Development and Property Rights: Time Limits on Land Ownership,” Economic Development Quarterly, Vol. 19, No. 3, pp. 271-283, 2005.

“The Investment Incentive Effects of Land Use Regulations,” Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, Vol. 31, No. 4, pp. 357-396, December 2005.

(with Robert A. Grovenstein, John P. Harding, C.F. Sirmans and Snasanee Thebpanya). “Commercial Mortgage Underwriting: How Well Do Lenders Manage the Risks?” Journal of Housing Economics, Vol. 14, No. 4, pp. 355-383, December 2005.

(with Jonathan Dombrow and C.F. Sirmans). “Big House, Little House: Relative Size and Value,” Real Estate Economics, forthcoming.

“Private Eminent Domain in Georgia: Just Peachy or the Pits?” URAG Research Notes, forthcoming.

Eric C. Twombly

(with Carol J. De Vita). “Who Gains from a Charitable Tax Credit Program?” Public Administration Review, Vol. 65, No. 1, 2005.

“Nonprofit Child and Youth Service Providers Showed Signs of Fiscal Stress Before 9/11,” Policy Brief No. 1, A Portrait of Nonprofits Serving Children in the Washington, D.C., Area, The Urban Institute Press, January 31, 2005.

(with Jennifer Claire Auer). “Policy Perspectives on the Location of Child Serving Organizations,” Policy Brief No. 2, A Portrait of Nonprofits Serving Children in the Washington, D.C., Area, The Urban Institute Press, forthcoming.

(with Jennifer Claire Auer). “Vital Signs: Indicators of the Nonprofit Safety Net for Children in the Washington, D.C., Region,” The Urban Institute Press, March 31, 2005.

(with Jennifer Claire Auer). “The Financial Scope of the Nonprofit Sector in the Greater Washington Region,” and “The Size and Scope of the Nonprofit Sector in the Greater Washington Region,” chapters in The Business of Doing Good in Greater Washington: How the Nonprofit Sector Contributes to the Region’s Economy, Nonprofit Roundtable of Greater Washington, February 2005.

(with Jennifer Claire Auer and Kanisha Bond). Community Anchors East of the River: An Analysis of the Charitable Infrastructure in Wards 7 and 8 in Washington, D.C., The Urban Institute Press, forthcoming.

(with Carol J. De Vita and Jennifer Claire Auer). The Nonprofit Human Service Sector, The Urban Institute Press, forthcoming.

(with Carol J. De Vita). “Nonprofits and Devolution: What Do We Know?” chapter in Nonprofits and Government: Collaboration and Conflict, 2nd Edition, Elizabeth T. Boris and C. Eugene Steuerle (eds.), The Urban Institute Press, forthcoming.

Neven Valev

“From a Currency Board to the Euro: Public Attitudes toward Unilateral Euroization in Bulgaria,” Comparative Economic Studies, forthcoming.

and Steven Buigut*. “Is the East Africa Community an Optimal Currency Area? A Structural Vector Autoregression Analysis,” World Development, forthcoming.

and Benno Torgler***. “Age and Corruption,” Journal of Bioeconomics, forthcoming.

“Economic Uncertainty and the Maturity of International Credit,” Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions & Money, forthcoming.

and Steven Buigut*. “Eastern and Southern Africa Monetary Integration: A Structural Vector Autoregression Analysis,” Review of Development Economics, forthcoming.

Mary Beth Walker

and David Sjoquist (with Christopher R. Geller). “The Effect of Private School Competition on Public School Performance in Georgia,” Public Finance Review, forthcoming.

see also Sally Wallace.

Sally Wallace

and James Alm. “Can Developing Countries Impose a Personal Income Tax?” chapter in The Challenges of Tax Reform in the 21st Century, James Alm, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, and Mark Rider (eds.), Norwell, Mass.: Springer Science + Business Media, Inc., forthcoming.

and Roy Bahl. “Equalization Transfers and Vertical Sharing,” chapter in Challenges in the Design of Fiscal Equalization and Intergovernmental Transfers, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez (ed.), forthcoming.

and Richard Bird***. “Taxing Alcohol: Reflections from International Experience,” chapter in Excise Tax Policy and Administration, Siebren Cnossen (ed.), South Africa: UNISA Press, 2005.

and Richard Hawkins**. “Elasticities of Consumption and Income Source,” Applied Economics, forthcoming.

and Roy Bahl. “Fiscal Decentralization and Fiscal Equalization within Regions: The Case of Russia,” Public Budgeting, Accounting and Financial Management, forthcoming.

, David L. Sjoquist and Mary Beth Walker. “A Mixture Model Analysis of Local Sales Taxes, Property Taxes and Expenditures,” Public Finance Review, Vol. 33, No. 1, pp. 36-61, January 2005.

and David L. Sjoquist (with Gary Cornia and Kelly Edmiston). “The Disappearing State Corporate Income Tax,” National Tax Journal: Forum on State Corporate Income Taxes, pp. 115-138, March 2005.

(with Greg Geisler). “The Use of Compensation for Tax Avoidance by Owners of Small Corporations,” Journal of the American Tax Association, pp. 73-90, Spring 2005.

and Susan K. Laury. “Confidentiality and Taxpayer Compliance,” National Tax Association Spring Symposium, 2005.

, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Mark Rider. “The Flat Tax in Russia,” National Tax Association Annual Conference Proceedings, forthcoming.

and Roy Bahl. “Public Financing in Developing and Transition Countries,” Public Budgeting and Finance, 2005.

see also James Alm.

see also Glenn M. Landers.

see also Susan K. Laury.

see also Jorge Martinez-Vazquez.

William L. Waugh, Jr.

Emergency Management: A Global Introduction, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe Publishers, forthcoming.

Terrorism and Weapons of Mass Destruction, New York, N.Y.: CRC Press, forthcoming.

Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Public Policy, Lexington Books, Policy Studies Organization, forthcoming.

The Future of Emergency Management, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Emmitsburg, Md.: Emergency Management Institute, forthcoming.

(with Kathleen Tierney), co-editors. Emergency Management: Principles and Practice for Local Government, 2nd Edition, Washington, D.C.: International City/County Management Association, forthcoming. Within this book, he wrote (with Kathleen Tierney) the chapters “Introduction: Emergency Management in a Homeland Security Environment” and “Conclusions: Future Directions in Local Emergency Management.”

and R. Brian Smith*. “Economic Development and Reconstruction on the Gulf After Katrina,” Economic Development Quarterly, forthcoming.

“Homeland Security and Local Hazard and Disaster Management,” Wilberforce Journal of Defense and Security Analysis, forthcoming.

and Gregory Streib. “Collaborative Management in Emergency Management,” Public Administration Review, Special Issue on Collaborative Management, forthcoming.

“The Political Costs of Failure after the Katrina and Rita Disasters,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Special Issue on Winds of Change: Repairing the National Emergency Management System after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, William L. Waugh (ed.), forthcoming.

and Gregory Streib (with J. Edwin Benton, Jacqueline Byers, Beverly Cigler, Kenneth Klase, Donald Menzel, Tanis Salant and James Svara). “Conducting Research on Counties in the 21st Century: A New Agenda and Database Considerations,” Public Administration Review, forthcoming.

“Risk Assessment and the All-Hazards Model: Addressing the Risk to Transit Systems after the Madrid Bombings,” Public Productivity and Management Review, forthcoming.

“The Existential Public Administrator” and with Wesley W. Waugh* “Phenomenology and Public Administration,” chapters in the Handbook of Organization Theory and Management: The Philosophical Approach, Thomas Lynch and Peter Cruise (eds.), New York, N.Y.: CRC Press, 2005.

“Mass Transit Security After the Madrid and London Bombings,” chapter in Handbook of Transportation Policy, 2nd Edition, Jeremy Plant (ed.), New York, N.Y.: CRC Press, forthcoming.

“Terrorism as Disaster," chapter in Handbook of Disaster Research, Havidan Rodriguez, E.L. Quarantelli and Russell R. Dynes (eds.), New York, N.Y.: Springer-Verlag, forthcoming.

“Public Administration, Emergency Management, and Disaster Policy,” chapter in Disciplines, Disasters and Emergency Management, David McEntire (ed.), Emmitsburg, Md.: Federal Emergency Management Agency, Emergency Management Institute, 2005.

(with Maureen M. Brown and Jeffrey Brudney). “Bridging the Gap Between IT Needs in the Public Sector and Public Administration Graduate Education,” chapter in Handbook of Public Information Systems, 2nd Edition, David Garson (ed.), New York, N.Y.: CRC Press, 2005.

wrote the essay “The Disaster That Was Katrina,” Natural Hazards Observer, pp. 9-10, November 2005.

wrote (with Emily Bentley) the essay “Katrina and the Necessity of Emergency Management Standards,” Journal of Emergency Management, Vol. 4, No. 5, pp. 8-10, September/October 2005.

wrote the essay “Terrorism and the All-Hazards Model,” Journal of Emergency Management, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 8-10, March/April 2005. Reprinted in Continuity e-Guide (a Weekly Update by Disaster Resource Guide), July 27, 2005.

see also Lloyd G. Nigro.

Katherine G. Willoughby

and Gregory Streib. “Local Governments as E-Governments: Meeting the Implementation Challenge,” Symposium on the Limitations of Implementation Research, James Slack (ed.), Public Administration Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 1-2, pp. 77-112, Spring 2005.

and Gregory Streib. “Exploring Internet Options: The Case of Georgia Consumer Services,” chapter in The Handbook of Public Information Systems, 2nd Edition, G. David Garson (ed.), pp. 353-367, 2005.

“The State of the States in 2005: Facing up to the Problem?” Spectrum: The Journal of State Government, Vol. 77, No. 2, pp. 8-13, Spring 2005.

(with Julia Melkers). “Models of Performance Measurement Use in Local Governments: Understanding Budgeting, Communication and Lasting Effects,” Public Administration Review, Vol. 65, No. 2, pp. 180-190, March/April 2005.

“The State of the States in 2005: Facing up to the Problem?” chapter in The Book of the States, Vol. 37, Keon Chi (ed.), Lexington, Ky.: Council of State Governments, pp. 183-190, 2005.

, Hai David Guo*, David Weir*, Katie Sobush*, and Emily Evans*. “A Report Card on Government Performance: Grading the States 2005,” Governing Special Issue, February 2005.

see also Gregory Streib.

Yongsheng Xu

(with Naoki Yoshihara). “Alternative Characterizations of Three Bargaining Solutions for Nonconvex Problems,” Games and Economic Behavior, forthcoming.

“Pareto Principle and Intergenerational Equity: Immediate Impatience, Universal Indifference and Impossibility,” Chapter 7 in Intergenerational Equity and Sustainability, John E. Roemer and Kotaro Suzumura (eds.), Hampshire, England, U.K.: Palgrave, forthcoming. 

Dennis R. Young

Editor. Wise Decision-Making in Uncertain Times: Using Nonprofit Resources Wisely, New York, N.Y.: The Foundation Center, forthcoming.

Editor. Financing Nonprofits: Bridging Theory and Practice, Lexington, Mass.: AltaMira Press, forthcoming.

“Social Enterprise in Community and Economic Development in the United States: Theory, Corporate Form and Purpose,” International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation Management, 2005.

“Complementary, Supplementary or Adversarial?: A Theoretical and Historical Examination of Nonprofit-Government Relations in the U.S.,” Chapter 1 in Government and Nonprofit Organizations: The Challenges of Civil Society, 2nd Edition, Elizabeth T. Boris and C. Eugene Steurele (eds.), Washington, D.C.: The Urban Institute Press, forthcoming.


1. Co-authored papers are listed once, either alphabetically or under the name of the first author. All Andrew Young School of Policy Studies' author names are hyperlinked or highlighted in bold. External co-authors are listed in parenthesis. Graduate students are bolded and designated with an asterisk, former graduate students with a double asterisk, and visiting faculty with a triple asterisk.

 

 

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