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In this book Pragati Rawat and John C. Morris identify and evaluate
the impact of factors that can help explain the difference in
e-participation, public participation using information and
communication technology, in different countries. While
cross-sectional studies have been covered, few have taken an
in-depth look at cross-national studies. This book attempts to fill
the gap using quantitative panel data to explore the influence of
technology and institutions, and the impact of their complex
relationships in a mediation and moderation analysis, on
e-participation. The current study reviews the scholarly work in
the field of “offline” and “online participation” to
identify a set of antecedents that influence e-participation. A
conceptual framework is developed, supported by the theories from
the public policy and socio-technical premise. The authors utilize
secondary data, primarily from the UN and World Economic Forum, for
143 countries from three waves of surveys to measure the dependent
and explanatory variables. The panel data is statistically analyzed
and findings reveal the role of technology as a mediator as well as
a moderator for institutions’ impact on e-participation. The
Effects of Technology and Institutions on E-Participation provides
a groundbreaking country-level analysis that will appeal to
academics and students of e-government and Digital Government,
Public Policy, Public Administration, Public Sector Innovation, and
Public Participation.
In this book Pragati Rawat and John C. Morris identify and evaluate
the impact of factors that can help explain the difference in
e-participation, public participation using information and
communication technology, in different countries. While
cross-sectional studies have been covered, few have taken an
in-depth look at cross-national studies. This book attempts to fill
the gap using quantitative panel data to explore the influence of
technology and institutions, and the impact of their complex
relationships in a mediation and moderation analysis, on
e-participation. The current study reviews the scholarly work in
the field of "offline" and "online participation" to identify a set
of antecedents that influence e-participation. A conceptual
framework is developed, supported by the theories from the public
policy and socio-technical premise. The authors utilize secondary
data, primarily from the UN and World Economic Forum, for 143
countries from three waves of surveys to measure the dependent and
explanatory variables. The panel data is statistically analyzed and
findings reveal the role of technology as a mediator as well as a
moderator for institutions' impact on e-participation. The Effects
of Technology and Institutions on E-Participation provides a
groundbreaking country-level analysis that will appeal to academics
and students of e-government and Digital Government, Public Policy,
Public Administration, Public Sector Innovation, and Public
Participation.
Policy Making and Southern Distinctiveness examines the uniqueness
of southern politics and their policy choices. While decades of
scholarship on the politics of the American South have focused on
partisanship and electoral outcomes as the primary elements of
interest in southern politics, few works have focused on the more
practical outcomes of these political processes, specifically,
comparing state policy choices of southern states to non-southern
states. This book examines six different policy arenas: voting
access, gun control, health care, reproductive rights, water, and
COVID-19 pandemic response, comparing policy choices in states in
the South with states in the non-South. The authors find that the
South is distinct in several, but not all, of the policy arenas
examined. They conclude that the South as a region is unique
because of the exceptional degree of one-party control evident in
the South, coupled with a long-standing preoccupation with
partisanship and race-based politics. Policy Making and Southern
Distinctiveness provides valuable insights into how and why states
behave in the manner they do and where southern states may diverge
from the rest of the country. It will be of interest to scholars of
southern politics, state comparative policy, public policy,
American politics, and federalism/intergovernmental relations.
After a great deal of discussion and debate across all levels of
government, President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act (ACA)
into law in March 2010. Since President Trump's election into
office, the ACA has stayed in the headlines. Trump has continued to
call for the replacement and repeal of the ACA, and several efforts
have spawned in both the House and the Senate to accomplish this
goal. Unlike welfare reform, which was generally embraced by all
states, the ACA has proven very divisive in some states, with some
states actively seeking to block implementation. Alternative
solutions continue to prove elusive. To better understand the major
factors driving decision-making process and state-level dynamics
influencing state support or opposition of the ACA, this book
examines the initial implementation through established support and
opposition factors across four states: Alabama, Michigan,
California, and New Hampshire. The choices made by states are a
direct consequence of long-term forces, and the choices made at the
national level. State Politics and the Affordable Care Act will be
of interest to scholars researching in public administration,
policy formulation and implementation, and policy analysis.
The nation's environmental policy approaches and methods are
becoming more flexible and diverse, with state governments
composing the fulcrum of policy changes. Southern environmental
politics and policy are especially valuable when considering a
changing environmental policy landscape because they present a
contradiction of caution and innovation. This caution derives from
the South's well-documented traditional culture while this
innovation crosses geographical, pollution media, and
intergovernmental levels. Environmental protection in the South
must take this paradox into account if progress is to be
successful. This book studies Southern environmental policy and
politics in order to understand the concrete realities of the
Southeast and extend those realities' understanding to other
regions of the country. It analyzes a series of cases that describe
the state of environmental policy implementation and management in
the South. These case studies cover a range of environmental areas,
including air quality, drinking water and wastewater, brownfields,
collaborative environmental management, and environmental justice,
among others. These cases explore the diversity and flexibility
which compose the dominant characters of environmental management
today.
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Speaking Green with a Southern Accent - Environmental Management and Innovation in the South (Hardcover, New)
Gerald Andrews Emison, John C. Morris; Contributions by Breaux David A, , Emison, Gerald A., , Gallagher, Deborah R., …
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R2,513
Discovery Miles 25 130
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The nation's environmental policy approaches and methods are
becoming more flexible and diverse, with state governments
composing the fulcrum of policy changes. Southern environmental
politics and policy are especially valuable when considering a
changing environmental policy landscape because they present a
contradiction of caution and innovation. This caution derives from
the South's well-documented traditional culture while this
innovation crosses geographical, pollution media, and
intergovernmental levels. Environmental protection in the South
must take this paradox into account if progress is to be
successful. This book studies Southern environmental policy and
politics in order to understand the concrete realities of the
Southeast and extend those realities' understanding to other
regions of the country. It analyzes a series of cases that describe
the state of environmental policy implementation and management in
the South. These case studies cover a range of environmental areas,
including air quality, drinking water and wastewater, brownfields,
collaborative environmental management, and environmental justice,
among others. These cases explore the diversity and flexibility
which compose the dominant characters of environmental management
today.
The term collaboration is widely used but not clearly understood or
operationalized. However, collaboration is playing an increasingly
important role between and across public, nonprofit, and for-profit
sectors. Collaboration has become a hallmark in both
intragovernmental and intergovernmental relationships. As
collaboration scholarship rapidly emerges, it diverges into several
directions, resulting in confusion about what collaboration is and
what it can be used to accomplish. This book provides much needed
insight into existing ideas and theories of collaboration,
advancing a revised theoretical model and accompanying typologies
that further our understanding of collaborative processes within
the public sector. Organized into three parts, each chapter
presents a different theoretical approach to public problems,
valuing the collective insights that result from honoring many
individual perspectives. Case studies in collaboration, split
across three levels of government, offer additional perspectives on
unanswered questions in the literature. Contributions are made by
authors from a variety of backgrounds, including an attorney, a
career educator, a federal executive, a human resource
administrator, a police officer, a self-employed entrepreneur, as
well as scholars of public administration and public policy.
Drawing upon the individual experiences offered by these
perspectives, the book emphasizes the commonalities of
collaboration. It is from this common ground, the shared
experiences forged among seemingly disparate interactions that
advances in collaboration theory arise. Advancing Collaboration
Theory offers a unique compilation of collaborative models and
typologies that enhance the existing understanding of public sector
collaboration.
The nation's approach to managing environmental policy and
protecting natural resources has shifted from the national
government's top down, command and control, regulatory approach,
used almost exclusively in the 1970s, to collaborative,
multi-sector approaches used in recent decades to manage problems
that are generally too complex, too expensive,, and too politically
divisive for one agency to manage or resolve on its own.
Governments have organized multi-sector collaborations as a way to
achieve better results for the past two decades. We know much about
why collaboration occurs. We know a good deal about how
collaborative processes work. Collaborations organized, led, and
managed by grassroots organizations are rarer, though becoming more
common. We do not as yet have a clear understanding of how they
might differ from government led collaborations. Hampton Roads,
Virginia, located at the southern end of the Chesapeake Bay, offers
an unusual opportunity to study and draw comparative lessons from
three grassroots environmental collaborations to restore three
rivers in the watershed, in terms of how they build, organize and
distribute social capital, deepen democratic values, and succeed in
meeting ecosystem restoration goals and benchmarks. This is
relevant for the entire Chesapeake Bay watershed, but is also
relevant for understanding grassroots collaborative options for
managing, protecting, and restoring watersheds throughout the U.S.
It may also provide useful information for developing grassroots
collaborations in other policy sectors. The premise underlying this
work is that to continue making progress toward achieving
substantive environmental outcomes in a world where the problems
are complex, expensive, and politically divisive, more non-state
stakeholders must be actively involved in defining the problems and
developing solutions. This will require more multi-sector
collaborations of the type that governments have increasingly
relied on for the past two decades. Our approach examines one
subset of environmental collaboration, those driven and managed by
grassroots organizations that were established to address specific
environmental problems and provide implementable solutions to those
problems, so that we may draw lessons that inform other grassroots
collaborative efforts.
Drawing on the careers of senior executives of the US Environmental
Protection Agency, True Green identifies the concrete actions that
work in protecting our nation's environment. By examining the
exquisitely difficult tasks of executive leadership in
environmental protection, one of the most conflicted public issues
of today, these scholars provide lessons of executive effectiveness
in the principal government institution essential to national
environmental progress. The EPA shoulders great expectations from
the public and political leaders on fulfilling its statutorily
assigned activities. As a result, EPA must act in concert with
state and local governments, nongovernment organizations and
interest groups, as well as business and industry. This volume also
highlights the career civil servants who bridge across from
policymakers to the government bureaucrats who must make real the
abstract policy choices of politicians. True Green uses the
experiences of the individual contributors to provide a deeper
understanding of the practices associated with effective executive
behavior in the Environmental Protection Agency.
The nation's approach to managing environmental policy and
protecting natural resources has shifted from the national
government's top down, command and control, regulatory approach,
used almost exclusively in the 1970s, to collaborative,
multi-sector approaches used in recent decades to manage problems
that are generally too complex, too expensive,, and too politically
divisive for one agency to manage or resolve on its own.
Governments have organized multi-sector collaborations as a way to
achieve better results for the past two decades. We know much about
why collaboration occurs. We know a good deal about how
collaborative processes work. Collaborations organized, led, and
managed by grassroots organizations are rarer, though becoming more
common. We do not as yet have a clear understanding of how they
might differ from government led collaborations. Hampton Roads,
Virginia, located at the southern end of the Chesapeake Bay, offers
an unusual opportunity to study and draw comparative lessons from
three grassroots environmental collaborations to restore three
rivers in the watershed, in terms of how they build, organize and
distribute social capital, deepen democratic values, and succeed in
meeting ecosystem restoration goals and benchmarks. This is
relevant for the entire Chesapeake Bay watershed, but is also
relevant for understanding grassroots collaborative options for
managing, protecting, and restoring watersheds throughout the U.S.
It may also provide useful information for developing grassroots
collaborations in other policy sectors. The premise underlying this
work is that to continue making progress toward achieving
substantive environmental outcomes in a world where the problems
are complex, expensive, and politically divisive, more non-state
stakeholders must be actively involved in defining the problems and
developing solutions. This will require more multi-sector
collaborations of the type that governments have increasingly
relied on for the past two decades. Our approach examines one
subset of environmental collaboration, those driven and managed by
grassroots organizations that were established to address specific
environmental problems and provide implementable solutions to those
problems, so that we may draw lessons that inform other grassroots
collaborative efforts.
Drawing on the careers of senior executives of the US Environmental
Protection Agency, True Green identifies the concrete actions that
work in protecting our nation's environment. By examining the
exquisitely difficult tasks of executive leadership in
environmental protection, one of the most conflicted public issues
of today, these scholars provide lessons of executive effectiveness
in the principal government institution essential to national
environmental progress. The EPA shoulders great expectations from
the public and political leaders on fulfilling its statutorily
assigned activities. As a result, EPA must act in concert with
state and local governments, nongovernment organizations and
interest groups, as well as business and industry. This volume also
highlights the career civil servants who bridge across from
policymakers to the government bureaucrats who must make real the
abstract policy choices of politicians. True Green uses the
experiences of the individual contributors to provide a deeper
understanding of the practices associated with effective executive
behavior in the Environmental Protection Agency.
The term collaboration is widely used but not clearly understood or
operationalized. However, collaboration is playing an increasingly
important role between and across public, nonprofit, and for-profit
sectors. Collaboration has become a hallmark in both
intragovernmental and intergovernmental relationships. As
collaboration scholarship rapidly emerges, it diverges into several
directions, resulting in confusion about what collaboration is and
what it can be used to accomplish. This book provides much needed
insight into existing ideas and theories of collaboration,
advancing a revised theoretical model and accompanying typologies
that further our understanding of collaborative processes within
the public sector. Organized into three parts, each chapter
presents a different theoretical approach to public problems,
valuing the collective insights that result from honoring many
individual perspectives. Case studies in collaboration, split
across three levels of government, offer additional perspectives on
unanswered questions in the literature. Contributions are made by
authors from a variety of backgrounds, including an attorney, a
career educator, a federal executive, a human resource
administrator, a police officer, a self-employed entrepreneur, as
well as scholars of public administration and public policy.
Drawing upon the individual experiences offered by these
perspectives, the book emphasizes the commonalities of
collaboration. It is from this common ground, the shared
experiences forged among seemingly disparate interactions that
advances in collaboration theory arise. Advancing Collaboration
Theory offers a unique compilation of collaborative models and
typologies that enhance the existing understanding of public sector
collaboration.
The Water Quality Act of 1987 ushered in a new era of clean water
policy to the US. The Act stands today as the longest-lived example
of national water quality policy. It included a then-revolutionary
funding model for wastewater infrastructure - the Clean Water State
Revolving Fund - which gave states much greater authority to
allocate clean water infrastructure resources. Significant
differences between states exist in terms of their ability to
provide adequate resources for the program, as well as their
ability (or willingness) to meet the wishes of Congress to serve
environmental needs and communities. This book examines the
patterns of state program resource distribution using case studies
and analysis of state and national program data. This book is
important for researchers from a range of disciplines, including
water, environmental and infrastructure policy,
federalism/intergovernmental relations, intergovernmental
administration, and natural resource management, as well as policy
makers and policy advocates.
This book determines that watershed protection and restoration in
the 21st century requires adaptive and responsive strategies that
incorporate regulatory frameworks in conjunction with community
stakeholder engagement. The severity and pervasiveness of watershed
pollution require building resource capacity through the formation
of multi-sector strategic alliances. Given the complexities of
watershed management and the need to leverage resources to achieve
better environmental outcomes, understanding the role of
motivations in watershed collaboration is vital to the efficacy of
watershed protection and restoration endeavors. The authors use an
in-depth case study to investigate the social processes and the
motivations that drive organizations operating within a shared
local watershed to voluntarily direct their resources and
participate in watershed collaboration.
After a great deal of discussion and debate across all levels of
government, President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act (ACA)
into law in March 2010. Since President Trump's election into
office, the ACA has stayed in the headlines. Trump has continued to
call for the replacement and repeal of the ACA, and several efforts
have spawned in both the House and the Senate to accomplish this
goal. Unlike welfare reform, which was generally embraced by all
states, the ACA has proven very divisive in some states, with some
states actively seeking to block implementation. Alternative
solutions continue to prove elusive. To better understand the major
factors driving decision-making process and state-level dynamics
influencing state support or opposition of the ACA, this book
examines the initial implementation through established support and
opposition factors across four states: Alabama, Michigan,
California, and New Hampshire. The choices made by states are a
direct consequence of long-term forces, and the choices made at the
national level. State Politics and the Affordable Care Act will be
of interest to scholars researching in public administration,
policy formulation and implementation, and policy analysis.
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