I'm excited to announce my project on partisan support for Olympic host bids has been accepted at Urban Affairs Review. Here's the link to the blog post on UAR's website!
Hosting the Olympics in U.S. cities comes with unique challenges regarding planning and execution, given that due to the federalist system of government the responsibility of planning and hosting th...
New (OPEN ACCESS) article is now up! Read more about the “citizens' governance spaces” created through urban gardening and dumpster-diving in Montreal. Read the research summary here: www.urbanaffairsreview.com/uar-archive/...
In many cities, and particularly in a context of neoliberal austerity and governmental withdrawal from public action, citizens act upon their urban environment. If these initiatives could be present...
🎺🎺🎺 NEW ISSUE! Issue 3 of our 60th anniversary volume is now available, w/reflections from @timweaver.bsky.socialwww.urbanaffairsreview.com/uar-archive/...
Issue 3 of our anniversary volume features an introductory essay by managing editors Christina Greer (Fordham University) and Tim Weaver (University at Albany). We revisit Elinor Ostrom’s“The Social...
Bai Linh Hoang and Andrea Benjamin’s piece in Urban Affairs Review last summer found this.
NEW online first! By J. Cameron Anglum, Anita Manion, + Sapna Varkey, "Increasing Minimum Teacher's Salaries: Opportunities & Drawbacks across Geography and Race." Read the write-up on our website and find the full article below 👇 www.urbanaffairsreview.com/uar-archive/...
One might be hard-pressed to turn on the evening news these days and avoid reports of some form of staffing shortage, a phenomenon which seems to cut across a myriad of professions ranging from bus ...
Issue 2 of our 60th anniversary volume is HERE! The editors revisit Michael Lipsky's classic 1971 "Street Level Bureaucracy." Visit our website to read more and view the full TOC 👇 www.urbanaffairsreview.com/uar-archive/...
Issue 2 of our anniversary volume features an introductory essay by managing editors Richardson Dilworth (Drexel University) and Mara Sidney (Rutgers University-Newark). We revisit Michael Lipsky’s “Street-Level Bureaucracy and the Analysis of Urban Reform” published in Urban Affairs Quarterly in 19
It was a busy weekend for #onlinefirst at UAR - *3* exciting new articles published since Saturday 👇
New (OPEN ACCESS) article is now up! Read more about the “citizens' governance spaces” created through urban gardening and dumpster-diving in Montreal. Read the research summary here: www.urbanaffairsreview.com/uar-archive/...
In many cities, and particularly in a context of neoliberal austerity and governmental withdrawal from public action, citizens act upon their urban environment. If these initiatives could be present...
New year, new articles! Check out the latest by Simon van Zoest + Tom Daamen, "Explaining Value Capture Implementation in New York, London, and Copenhagen" www.urbanaffairsreview.com/uar-archive/...
Value capture (VC) is widely cited as a method for local authorities to continue to provide urban public goods, such as public transport or measures to make neighborhoods more climate-resilient, in ...
🎧 The finale of our second podcast miniseries on cities + migration is now LIVE! W/ excerpts from Leslie Gross-Wyrtzen, Deirdre Conlon, Nancy Hiemstra, David Kaufmann, + Andrew Baldwin. Link to show notes below, find + subscribe on your favorite platform! www.urbanaffairsreview.com/uar-archive/...
In this four-part miniseries, we spoke with six scholars whose research addresses different aspects, geographies, and approaches to analyzing and understanding the relationship between migration and...