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Description: Papers published in Journal of Policy Analysis and Management
Series handle: RePEc:wly:jpamgt
ISSN: 0276-8739
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Content
2010, Volume 29, Issue 3
- 645-649 The character of harms: Operational challenges in control , by Malcolm K. Sparrow. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008, 264 pp., $32.99, hardback
by Heather E. Campbell
- 649-653 Structuring an energy technology revolution , by Charles Weiss and William B. Bonvillian. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2009, 318 pp., $24, hardcover
by Jonathan B. Wiener
2010, Volume 29, Issue 2
- 215-216 Notes from the Editor: Special issue on poverty measurement
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 217-226 Poverty measurement in the U.S., Europe, and developing countries
by Kenneth A. Couch & Maureen A. Pirog
- 227-242 Challenges in an aging society: Presidential address to APPAM
by Katherine Swartz
- 243-266 The distributional impact of in-kind public benefits in European countries
by Alari Paulus & Holly Sutherland & Panos Tsakloglou
- 267-284 Asset-based measurement of poverty
by Andrea Brandolini & Silvia Magri & Timothy M. Smeeding
- 285-304 Indicators of poverty and social exclusion in a global context
by Eric Marlier & A. B. Atkinson
- 305-325 Using non-monetary deprivation indicators to analyze poverty and social exclusion: Lessons from Europe?
by Brian Nolan & Christopher T. Whelan
- 326-350 How regressive are indirect taxes? A microsimulation analysis for five European countries
by André Decoster & Jason Loughrey & Cathal O'Donoghue & Dirk Verwerft
- 351-372 Who became poor, who escaped poverty, and why? Developing and using a retrospective methodology in five countries
by Anirudh Krishna
- 373-386 Using the American community survey to create a National Academy of Sciences-style poverty measure: Work by the New York City Center for Economic Opportunity
by Mark Levitan & Christine D'Onofrio & Gayatri Koolwal & John Krampner & Daniel Scheer & Todd Seidel & Vicky Virgin
- 387-400 Estimating the potential effects of poverty reduction policies
by Sheila Zedlewski & Linda Giannarelli & Laura Wheaton
- 401-407 Fighting poverty: Attentive policy can make a huge difference
by Kenneth Couch & Timothy M. Smeeding & Jane Waldfogel
- 408-412 Out of reach: Place, poverty and the new American welfare state , by Scott W. Allard. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009, 280 pp., $35.00, paperback
by Eugene B. McGregor & Bruce A. Weber
- 412-415 Transforming global information and communication markets: The political economy of innovation , by Peter F. Cowhey and Jonathan D. Aronson. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2009, 368 pp., $34.00 hardback
by Eugene B. McGregor & Mayer-Schönberger Viktor
- 416-416 Award given by the Vernon Prize Committee for volume 28 of JPAM
by Ronald Mincy & Jennifer Hill & Marilyn Sinkewicz
2010, Volume 29, Issue 1
2009, Volume 28, Issue 4
- 549-550 Notes from the editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 551-554 Introduction to the research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 555-576 Explaining race, poverty, and gender disparities in advanced course-taking
by Dylan Conger & Mark C. Long & Patrice Iatarola
- 577-599 The effects of welfare reform on the academic performance of children in low-income households
by Amalia R. Miller & Lei Zhang
- 600-625 Ethnic enclave residence, employment, and commuting of Latino workers
by Cathy Yang Liu
- 626-654 A comparative cost analysis of commodity foods from the U.S. Department of Agriculture in the National School Lunch Program
by Cora Peterson
- 655-671 Voter-weighted environmental preferences
by Jason Bell & Joel Huber & W. Kip Viscusi
- 672-691 Collusion in auctions for emission permits: An experimental analysis
by Dallas Burtraw & Jacob Goeree & Charles A. Holt & Erica Myers & Karen Palmer & William Shobe
- 692-693 Should “value-added” models be used to evaluate teachers?
by Allison Armour-Garb
- 693-699 Teacher value-added: Don't end the search before it starts
by Douglas N. Harris
- 700-709 Evaluating value-added models: A validity argument approach
by Heather C. Hill
- 709-711 Response to Heather C. Hill
by Douglas N. Harris
- 711-712 Response to Douglas N. Harris
by Heather C. Hill
- 713-715 European measures of income, poverty, and social exclusion: Recent developments and lessons for U.S. poverty measurement
by Douglas J. Besharov & Kenneth Couch
- 715-725 Deconstructing European poverty measures: What relative and absolute scales measure
by Richard V. Burkhauser
- 725-731 Impressionistic realism: The Europeans focus the U.S. on measurement
by David S. Johnson
- 732-738 Europe's other poverty measures: Absolute thresholds underlying social assistance
by Richard Bavier
- 738-744 European measures of poverty and “social exclusion”: Material deprivation, consumption, and life satisfaction
by Neil Gilbert
- 745-752 New comparative measures of income, material deprivation, and well-being
by Timothy M. Smeeding
- 753-757 The Politics of Presidential Appointments: Political Control and Bureaucratic Performance , by David E. Lewis, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2006, 293 pp., $60.00 hardcover, $24.95 paperback
by Evan J. Ringquist
- 757-760 Europe's Role in Nation-Building: From the Balkans to the Congo , by James Dobbins, Seth G. Jones, Keith Crane, Christopher S. Chivvis, Andrew Radin, F. Stephen Larrabee, Nora Bensahel, Brooke K. Stearns, and Benjamin W. Goldsmith. Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation, October, 2008, 295 pp., $35.00, paperback
by Jason D. Klein
- 760-763 Work-Life Policies , Edited by Ann C. Crouter and Allen Booth. Washington, DC: The Urban Institute Press, 2009, 372 pp., $32.50 paperback
by Sunny L. Munn
2009, Volume 28, Issue 3
- 335-335 Notes from the Editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 336-339 Introduction to the research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 340-365 Policy incentives and the extension of mortgage credit: Increasing market discipline for subprime lending
by Xudong An & Raphael W. Bostic
- 366-393 Harming the best: How schools affect the black-white achievement gap
by Eric A. Hanushek & Steven G. Rivkin
- 394-416 Inside national service: AmeriCorps' impact on participants
by Peter Frumkin & JoAnn Jastrzab & Margaret Vaaler & Adam Greeney & Robert T. Grimm & Kevin Cramer & Nathan Dietz
- 417-439 Marriage: Cause or mere indicator of future earnings growth?
by Ronald Mincy & Jennifer Hill & Marilyn Sinkewicz
- 440-462 The nonprofit advantage: Producing quality in thick and thin child care markets
by Gordon Cleveland & Michael Krashinsky
- 463-478 A better budget rule
by Michael Dothan & Fred Thompson
- 479-495 NSF's Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR): Subsidizing academic research or state budgets?
by Yonghong Wu
- 496-496 Introduction
by Richard P. Nathan
- 497-505 Making management count: A case for theory- and evidence-based public management
by Dennis C. Smith
- 505-512 What can we expect from performance measurement activities?
by Beryl A. Radin
- 512-514 What can we expect from performance management activities that we cannot expect from performance measurement?
by Dennis C. Smith
- 514-516 Response to Dennis Smith
by Beryl Radin
- 517-520 The search for social entrepreneurship , by Paul C. Light. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2008, 296 pp., $26.95, paperback
by Leslie Lenkowsky
- 521-523 The warping of government work , by John D. Donahue. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008, 213 pp., $35.00, hardback
by Eugene B. Mcgregor
2009, Volume 28, Issue 2
2009, Volume 28, Issue 1
- 1-1 Notes from the Editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 2-5 Introduction to research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 6-28 Using private demand studies to calculate socially optimal vaccine subsidies in developing countries
by Joseph Cook & Marc Jeuland & Brian Maskery & Donald Lauria & Dipika Sur & John Clemens & Dale Whittington
- 29-54 Parental leave policies and parents' employment and leave-taking
by Wen-Jui Han & Christopher Ruhm & Jane Waldfogel
- 55-80 The effects of NBPTS-certified teachers on student achievement
by Douglas N. Harris & Tim R. Sass
- 81-101 The long-term effects of housing assistance on work and welfare
by Sandra Newman & C. Scott Holupka & Joseph Harkness
- 102-121 Inequities in enforcement? Environmental justice and government performance
by David M. Konisky
- 122-146 Institutional factors affecting biophysical outcomes in forest management
by Eric A. Coleman
- 147-163 The effect of recent tax changes on taxable income: Evidence from a new panel of tax returns
by Bradley T. Heim
- 164-165 The role of random assignment in social policy research
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 165-166 Some empirically viable alternatives to random assignment
by Thomas D. Cook & Peter M. Steiner
- 166-168 Managing applied research in federal employment policy
by David E. Balducchi & Stephen A. Wandner
- 168-169 Comment on random assignment in policy research
by James Q. Wilson
- 169-172 Are the alternatives to randomized assignment nearly as good? Statistical corrections to nonrandomized evaluations
by Maureen A. Pirog & Anne L. Buffardi & Colleen K. Chrisinger & Pradeep Singh & John Briney
- 173-174 Beyond random assignment for internal validity and beyond social research for random assignment
by Laura Langbein
- 174-175 The crowding out hypothesis
by David Greenberg
- 175-176 Get the question right, then choose the method
by Gordon Berlin & Robert Solow
- 176-178 Is random assignment good enough?
by Eunsu Ju
- 178-180 Reply comments
by Rob Hollister
- 180-181 Reply comments
by Richard P. Nathan
- 182-185 Managing the Skies: Public Policy, Organization, and Financing of Air Traffic Management , by Clinton V. Oster and John Strong, Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2007, 221 pp., $89.95 hardback
by David Z. Plavin
- 185-192 Toward Excellence with Equity: An Emerging Vision for Closing the Achievement Gap , by Ronald F. Ferguson. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007, 375 pp., $60.66, paperback| Categorically Unequal: The American Stratification System , by Douglas S. Massey. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2007, 319 pp.,$21.45, hardback| Segregation: The Rising Costs of America , by James H. Carr and Nandinee K. Kutty, Eds. New York: Routledge, 2008, 352 pp., $33.25, paperback
by Eugene B. McGregor
- 193-193 Erratum
by David A. Reingold
2008, Volume 27, Issue 4
- 717-718 Notes from the Editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 719-723 Introduction to the research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 724-750 Three conditions under which experiments and observational studies produce comparable causal estimates: New findings from within-study comparisons
by Thomas D. Cook & William R. Shadish & Vivian C. Wong
- 751-770 Ranking state fiscal structures using theory and evidence
by Neil Bania & Joe A. Stone
- 771-792 In-state tuition for the undocumented: Education effects on Mexican young adults
by Neeraj Kaushal
- 793-818 The narrowing gap in New York City teacher qualifications and its implications for student achievement in high-poverty schools
by Donald Boyd & Hamilton Lankford & Susanna Loeb & Jonah Rockoff & James Wyckoff
- 819-847 Compensation rules for climate policy in the electricity sector
by Dallas Burtraw & Karen Palmer
- 848-866 Minimum wages and the economic well-being of single mothers
by Joseph J. Sabia
- 867-894 Do social policy reforms have different impacts on employment and welfare use as economic conditions change?
by Chris M. Herbst
- 895-925 Does housing matter for poor families? A critical summary of research and issues still to be resolved
by Sandra J. Newman
- 926-926 Can government-sponsored evaluations be independent?
by Richard P. Nathan
- 927-934 Threats to independence and objectivity of government-supported evaluation and policy research
by Charles E. Metcalf
- 934-941 Can government-supported evaluation and policy research be independent?
by David A. Reingold
- 942-943 David A. Reingold's response to Charles E. Metcalf
by David A. Reingold
- 943-944 Charles E. Metcalf's response to David A. Reingold
by Charles E. Metcalf
- 945-945 Professional practice
by Richard P. Nathan
- 945-960 Does more (or even better) information lead to better budgeting? A new perspective
by Philip G. Joyce
- 960-962 Better information is needed to make better federal budget decisions
by Kenneth Apfel
- 962-965 Federal fiscal problems are structural and immune to repairs of budgeting processes
by Donald W. Moran
- 965-967 Federal budget decisions are bad because it is much harder to make good choices
by Rudolph G. Penner
- 967-970 Federal budgeting: When do the electoral and analytic imperatives meet?
by Paul Posner
- 970-972 The federal budget: The erosion of bipartisan fiscal discipline
by Alice M. Rivlin
- 972-975 Policy analysis can inform federal budget choices, but only if there is political will
by Philip G. Joyce
- 976-977 The 2006 Park City APPAM spring conference (IV)
by Michael O'Hare
- 977-982 Law, ethics, and craft skills
by Eric R. Jensen
- 983-992 Discussion report: Law, ethics, and craft skills
by Roland J. Cole
- 992-1003 Practitioners' roles, internships, and practicum courses in public policy and management education
by Robert Garris & Janice Madden & William M. Rodgers III
- 1004-1008 Discussion report: Practitioners in the degree program
by Kenneth Apfel
- 1009-1026 Undergraduate and doctoral education in public policy: What? Why? Why not? Whereto?
by Joseph Cordes & Dylan Conger & Helen Ladd & Michael Luger
- 1027-1030 Discussion report: The “bookends”: The policy Ph.D. and the bachelor's degrees
by Joseph Cordes & Dylan Conger
- 1030-1044 Pedagogy for policy analysis and management
by Michael O'Hare
- 1045-1049 Discussion report: Pedagogy for policy analysis and management
by Michael Lipsky
- 1050-1053 Managing Within Networks: Adding Value to Public Organizations, by Robert Agranoff. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2007, 274 pp., $26.95, paperback
by Hal G. Rainey
September 2008, Volume 27, Issue 4
- 717-718 Notes from the Editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 719-723 Introduction to the research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 724-750 Three conditions under which experiments and observational studies produce comparable causal estimates: New findings from within‐study comparisons
by Thomas D. Cook & William R. Shadish & Vivian C. Wong
- 751-770 Ranking state fiscal structures using theory and evidence
by Neil Bania & Joe A. Stone
- 771-792 In‐state tuition for the undocumented: Education effects on Mexican young adults
by Neeraj Kaushal
- 793-818 The narrowing gap in New York City teacher qualifications and its implications for student achievement in high‐poverty schools
by Donald Boyd & Hamilton Lankford & Susanna Loeb & Jonah Rockoff & James Wyckoff
- 848-866 Minimum wages and the economic well‐being of single mothers
by Joseph J. Sabia
- 867-894 Do social policy reforms have different impacts on employment and welfare use as economic conditions change?
by Chris M. Herbst
- 895-925 Does housing matter for poor families? A critical summary of research and issues still to be resolved
by Sandra J. Newman
- 926-926 Can government‐sponsored evaluations be independent?
by Richard P. Nathan
- 927-934 Threats to independence and objectivity of government‐supported evaluation and policy research
by Charles E. Metcalf
- 934-941 Can government‐supported evaluation and policy research be independent?
by David A. Reingold
- 942-943 David A. Reingold's response to Charles E. Metcalf
by David A. Reingold
- 943-944 Charles E. Metcalf's response to David A. Reingold
by Charles E. Metcalf
- 945-945 Professional practice
by Richard P. Nathan
- 945-960 Does more (or even better) information lead to better budgeting? A new perspective
by Philip G. Joyce
- 960-962 Better information is needed to make better federal budget decisions
by Kenneth Apfel
- 962-965 Federal fiscal problems are structural and immune to repairs of budgeting processes
by Donald W. Moran
- 965-967 Federal budget decisions are bad because it is much harder to make good choices
by Rudolph G. Penner
- 967-970 Federal budgeting: When do the electoral and analytic imperatives meet?
by Paul Posner
- 970-972 The federal budget: The erosion of bipartisan fiscal discipline
by Alice M. Rivlin
- 972-975 Policy analysis can inform federal budget choices, but only if there is political will
by Philip G. Joyce
- 976-977 The 2006 Park City APPAM spring conference (IV)
by Michael O'Hare
- 977-982 Law, ethics, and craft skills
by Eric R. Jensen
- 983-992 Discussion report: Law, ethics, and craft skills
by Roland J. Cole
- 992-1003 Practitioners' roles, internships, and practicum courses in public policy and management education
by Robert Garris & Janice Madden & William M. Rodgers III
- 1004-1008 Discussion report: Practitioners in the degree program
by Kenneth Apfel
- 1009-1026 Undergraduate and doctoral education in public policy: What? Why? Why not? Whereto?
by Joseph Cordes & Dylan Conger & Helen Ladd & Michael Luger
- 1027-1030 Discussion report: The “bookends”: The policy Ph.D. and the bachelor's degrees
by Joseph Cordes & Dylan Conger
- 1045-1049 Discussion report: Pedagogy for policy analysis and management
by Michael Lipsky
- 1050-1053 Managing Within Networks: Adding Value to Public Organizations, by Robert Agranoff. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2007, 274 pp., $26.95, paperback
by Hal G. Rainey
2008, Volume 27, Issue 3
- 453-456 Introduction to the research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 457-478 A strategic response to class size reduction: Combination classes and student achievement in California
by David Sims
- 479-497 Marriage patterns among unwed mothers: Before and after PRWORA
by Deborah Roempke Graefe & Daniel T. Lichter
- 498-520 The effects of an employer subsidy on employment outcomes: A study of the work opportunity and welfare-to-work tax credits
by Sarah Hamersma
- 521-535 Cognitive and non-cognitive predictors of success in adult education programs: Evidence from experimental data with low-income welfare recipients
by Lindsey Jeanne Leininger & Ariel Kalil
- 536-555 Causes of Urban Sprawl in the United States: Auto reliance as compared to natural evolution, flight from blight, and local revenue reliance
by Robert W. Wassmer
- 556-576 Do Job Corps performance measures track program impacts?
by Peter Z. Schochet & John A. Burghardt
- 577-605 The dynamics of poverty in the United States: A review of data, methods, and findings
by Stephanie Riegg Cellini & Signe-Mary McKernan & Caroline Ratcliffe
- 606-606 The role of random assignment in social policy research
by Richard P. Nathan
- 607-610 Nathan response to Robinson Hollister's opening statement
by Richard P. Nathan
- 611-615 Hollister response to Richard Nathan's opening statement
by Robinson Hollister
- 616-616 The 2006 Park City APPAM spring conference (III)
by Michael O'Hare
- 617-624 Discussion report: Do we try to teach our students too much?
by John Mendeloff
- 624-635 Public management, politics, and the policy process in the public affairs curriculum
by Jeffrey D. Straussman
- 635-640 Discussion report: Process, politics, and management in the curriculum
by Beryl A. Radin
- 640-669 Quantitative methods, economics, and or models
by Anand Desai
- 670-675 Discussion report: Quantitative methods, statistics, and or models
by Marvin B. Mandell
- 676-682 Conflict resolution, alternative dispute techniques, and modes of consensus building
by Alice M. Rivlin
- 683-686 Discussion report: Conflict resolution, alternative dispute techniques, and modes of consensus building
by Judy Feder & Astrid E. Merget
- 687-690 The Sandbox Investment: The Preschool Movement and Kids-First Politics , by David L. Kirp, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 333 pp., $26.95 hardcover
by Jane Waldfogel
- 690-692 Measuring the Performance of the Hollow State , by David G. Frederickson and H. George Frederickson, Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2006, 218 pp., $26.95 paper
by John D. Donahue
- 692-695 Paying the Tab: The Costs and Benefits of Alcohol Control , by Philip J. Cook, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007, 278 pp., $35 hardcover
by Mark A. R. Kleiman
2008, Volume 27, Issue 2