44 results on '"Aaron Deslatte"'
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2. Background on Economic Development
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Aaron Deslatte
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Development economics ,Business - Published
- 2023
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3. Staff support and administrative capacity in strategic planning for local sustainability
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Rachel M. Krause, Aaron Deslatte, and Christopher V. Hawkins
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Strategic planning ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Staff support ,Sustainability ,Business ,Environmental planning ,Management Information Systems - Abstract
Strategic plans are widely used by municipalities as a means of directing their own activities, but relatively few studies have examined factors associated with cities’ decisions to embed sustainab...
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- 2021
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4. Organizing and Institutionalizing Local Sustainability
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Aaron Deslatte
- Abstract
This Element explores the role of public managers as designers. Drawing from systems-thinking and strategic management, a process-tracing methodology is used to examine three design processes whereby public managers develop strategies for adapting to climate change, build the requisite capabilities and evaluate outcomes. Across three cases, the findings highlight the role of managers as 'design- oriented' integration agents and point to areas where additional inquiry is warranted. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
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- 2022
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5. Assessing sustainability through the Institutional Grammar of urban water systems
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Laura Helmke-Long, Margaret Garcia, Aaron Deslatte, John M. Anderies, Elizabeth Koebele, and George M. Hornberger
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Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Grammar ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Sustainability ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Urban water ,Environmental planning ,media_common - Published
- 2021
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6. Probing the Fiscal Implications of Multipurpose Development Districts: An Institutional Analysis of Florida Community Development Districts
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David P. Carter, Aaron Deslatte, and Tyler A. Scott
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Economic growth ,Public Administration ,Political Science and International Relations ,Institutional analysis ,Business ,Urban governance ,Community development - Abstract
Across the U.S., private land developers are forgoing traditional financing of new suburban infrastructure in favor of an institutional innovation in special government—multipurpose development districts. This article presents an exploratory analysis of the fiscal characteristics of this relatively novel financing and governing mechanism. Focusing on residential developments financed through the creation of Florida multipurpose development districts, or community development districts (CDDs), we ask: What is the general profile of CDD borrowing and spending? What functional trends are reflected in CDD borrowing and spending and how do they compare to those of their general-purpose counterparts? How does CDD borrowing and spending change over time as residents, not developers, take over responsibility for district administration? We consider two institutional design principles important for self-governance of such developments—accountability and representation. The discussion raises self-governance implications, particularly whether multipurpose development district financing creates incentives for developers to “oversupply” infrastructure to maximize profits.
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- 2021
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7. Keeping policy commitments: An organizational capability approach to local green housing equity
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Aaron Deslatte, Serena Kim, Christopher V. Hawkins, and Eric Stokan
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Public Administration ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law - Published
- 2022
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8. Sustainability transitions in urban water management
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Aaron Deslatte, Margaret Garcia, Elizabeth A. Koebele, and John M. Anderies
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- 2022
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9. Sustainability Synergies or Silos? The Opportunity Costs of Local Government Organizational Capabilities
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Aaron Deslatte and Eric Stokan
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Marketing ,Opportunity cost ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Information silo ,Local government ,Sustainability ,Business ,Industrial organization - Published
- 2020
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10. How Can Local Governments Address Pandemic Inequities?
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Aaron Deslatte, Megan E. Hatch, and Eric Stokan
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Marketing ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Viewpoint Articles ,The Fourth Pillar ,Framing (social sciences) ,Viewpoint Article ,Development economics ,Pandemic ,Business ,Mutual aid ,Block grant ,Community Development Block Grant ,Social equality - Abstract
COVID‐19 is exposing a nexus between communities disproportionately suffering from underlying health conditions, policy‐reinforced disparities, and susceptibility to the disease. As the virus spreads, policy responses will need to shift from focusing on surveillance and mitigation to recovery and prevention. Local governments, with their histories of mutual aid and familiarity with local communities, are capable of meeting these challenges. However, funding must flow in a flexible enough fashion for local governments to tailor their efforts to preserve vital services and rebuild local economies. We argue in this article that the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) and the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant (EECBG) programs are mechanisms for how to provide funds in a manner adaptable to local context while also focusing on increasing social equity. Administrators must emphasize the fourth pillar of public administration ‐‐ social equity ‐‐ in framing government responses to the pandemic.
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- 2020
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11. The Erosion of Trust During a Global Pandemic and How Public Administrators Should Counter It
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Aaron Deslatte
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Marketing ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Motivated reasoning ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Equity (finance) ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Public administration ,0506 political science ,Pandemic ,050602 political science & public administration ,Risk communication ,Business - Abstract
This article argues that public administrators must advance a more equity-based assessment of vulnerabilities in American communities and more risk-based communication strategies. It provides an overview of partisan motivated reasoning, how this has influenced the response to the coronavirus pandemic. Experimental evidence then demonstrates how the framing of the pandemic can influence trust in various public messengers. The coronavirus pandemic is merely one of the many exigent threats humanity faces today. Public administrators are the planners, engineers, analysts, auditors, lawyers, and managers on the front lines of these existential crises. It is their job to sift through the information environment and—however boundedly—tackle problems. For the sake of the American democracy, public administrators need to regain the people’s trust. They could start by leveling with them about the challenges ahead.
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- 2020
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12. Performance, Satisfaction, or Loss Aversion? A Meso–Micro Assessment of Local Commitments to Sustainability Programs
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William L. Swann, Aaron Deslatte, and Richard C. Feiock
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Marketing ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Environmental economics ,0506 political science ,Loss aversion ,Sustainability ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics ,Performance satisfaction - Abstract
A normative assumption of government reform efforts such as New Public Management is that fostering a more innovative, proactive, and risk-taking organizational culture—developing what has been described as an “entrepreneurial orientation” (EO)—improves performance. But in arenas like urban sustainability, performance can be an ambiguous, multifaceted concept. Managers’ assessments of their own nimbleness, innovative thinking, and risk culture are also likely to influence how they interpret the risk-reward balance of opportunities to enhance organizational performance. This study examines how meso-level organizational decisions impact managers’ individual risk-assessments of sustainability initiatives. We do so through a combination of Bayesian structural equation modeling of US local government survey data collected over two time periods, and an artifactual survey experiment with empaneled local government employees. This multimethod design allows us to examine the role of organizational performance and EO—meso-level learning heuristics—in shaping the micro-foundations of managerial risk assessment. The organization-level observational results indicate that local governments engage in risk-seeking behavior in order to minimize their potential for losses of prior effort. Experimental results confirm local government administrators are loss-averse when asked to evaluate the merits of initiating a hypothetical sustainability program.
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- 2020
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13. Implementing city sustainability: Overcoming administrative silos to achieve functional collective action, by Rachel M. Krause and Christopher Hawkins
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Aaron Deslatte
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Urban Studies ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Rhetoric ,Sustainability ,Environmental ethics ,Collective action ,media_common - Abstract
For more than 2 decades now, a considerable amount of attention and rhetoric has been devoted to the idea that cities can, should, and do play a lead role in responding to anthropogenic climate cha...
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- 2021
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14. Repowering Cities: Governing Climate Change Mitigation in New York City, Los Angeles, and Toronto. By Sara Hughes. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2019. 224p. $41.95 cloth
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Aaron Deslatte
- Subjects
Climate change mitigation ,Political science ,Political Science and International Relations ,Repowering ,Economic history - Published
- 2020
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15. Positivity and Negativity Dominance in Citizen Assessments of Intergovernmental Sustainability Performance
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Aaron Deslatte
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Marketing ,Dominance (ethology) ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,0502 economics and business ,05 social sciences ,Sustainability ,050602 political science & public administration ,Negativity effect ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management ,0506 political science - Abstract
Understanding how the public assesses the performance of complex, intergovernmental efforts such as sustainability is critical for understanding both managerial decision-making and institutional design. Drawing from the performance and federalism literature, this study investigates the role that distinctive elements of negativity bias play in citizen assessments of intergovernmental performance. In three survey experiments, this study exploits a well-known intergovernmental initiative to explore the effects of episodic performance information on citizen support for varying sustainability-related activities. Two inter-related research questions are addressed. First, does the positive or negative valence of citizen performance assessments vary with the type and scope of activity? Second, does positive or negative performance information tend to dominate in more realistic scenarios in which both types of stimuli interact? The results advance theoretical understanding of public performance with evidence that the type of activity can influence citizen assessments both positively and negatively. Additionally, partisan cues can overwhelm otherwise positive views of performance in some contexts, a concept described in the psychology literature as negativity dominance. The findings add important insights by showing that biased reasoning of citizens is not just a blanket affective association with constant treatment effects across any type of governmental effort, but is contingent on both the activity and political context.
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- 2020
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16. Beyond Borders: Governmental Fragmentation and the Political Market for Growth in American Cities
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Aaron Deslatte and Eric Stokan
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Competition (economics) ,Politics ,Public Administration ,Political Science and International Relations ,Fragmentation (computing) ,Polycentricity ,Economics ,Economic geography ,Public choice - Abstract
Political fragmentation has been conceptualized as a phenomenon which increases competition for mobile citizens and jobs between local governments within the same region. However, the empirical basis for this nexus between governmental fragmentation and increased competition for development is surprisingly lacking. Utilizing a newly constructed database that matches political fragmentation indices (horizontal, vertical, and bordered) to a nationwide survey of economic development officials in 2014, we begin to fill this gap by analyzing the influence fragmentation has on the use of tax incentives, regulatory flexibility, and community development tools in U.S. cities. Applying the political market framework and a Bayesian inferential approach, we find that the proliferation of local governments increases incentive use. However, more specialized governance increases the probability of using community development activities.
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- 2019
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17. Elucidating the Linkages Between Entrepreneurial Orientation and Local Government Sustainability Performance
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Aaron Deslatte and William L. Swann
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Marketing ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Performance management ,Entrepreneurial orientation ,Local government ,Sustainability ,Strategic management ,Business ,Economic system - Abstract
Linking strategic management to performance has been called essential for public managers to confront pernicious environmental and community problems in the 21st century. This article examines the role that an organization’s entrepreneurial orientation (EO) plays in the linkages between organizational capacities, strategies, and perceived performance. An EO is considered a key driver of a public organization’s willingness to engage in risk taking, innovation, and proactivity aimed at enhancing organizational routines, decision-making, and performance. Scholars have provided empirical guidance for the antecedents and consequences of entrepreneurialism in bureaucracy, yet we know little systematically about how EO links to strategies that may affect performance in the public sector. To investigate, we employ a mixed methods design using a nationwide survey of U.S. local governments and interviews with local government managers about their experiences in sustainability programs. Quantitatively, we find evidence for environmental factors of political and administrative capacities positively influencing EO, and that strategic activities of performance information use, venturing, and interorganizational collaboration mediate the relation between EO and perceived sustainability performance. Interviews corroborate these findings and illuminate how local government managers proactively engage stakeholders, consider risk taking, build capacity, and pursue innovation in sustainability.
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- 2019
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18. Institutional Analysis with the Institutional Grammar
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Saba Siddiki, Raul Pacheco-Vega, Aaron Deslatte, Cali Curley, Tanya Heikkila, Christopher M. Weible, Abby Bennett, and David P. Carter
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Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Grammar ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Institutional analysis ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Linguistics ,media_common - Published
- 2019
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19. Specialized governance and regional land-use outcomes: A spatial analysis of Florida community development districts
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Aaron Deslatte, Tyler A. Scott, and David P. Carter
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Growth management ,Land use ,Corporate governance ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Urban sprawl ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Forestry ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Local government ,Regional planning ,Regional science ,Business ,Zoning ,Community development ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Specialized governance literature tends to approach special district differences at a surface level, rarely delving into consequential distinctions between districts types or their implications for policy outcomes. This article offers a step towards addressing these limitations by examining the land use impacts of an innovation in local government form referred to as “multipurpose development districts.” The article builds from a theory of local government formation to examine how Florida development districts – formally referred to within the state as community development districts (CDDs) – impact regional development patterns. Combining spatial data on land-cover change and CDD boundaries with nonparametric and Bayesian modeling approaches, the article provides a novel examination of CDDs’ influence on urban sprawl over a 15-year period. The results suggest that private developers’ use of development district formation to finance development infrastructure contributes to development in unincorporated areas. However, because within-district sprawl is disincentivized and overall district siting remains subject to regional planning and zoning restrictions, CDDs cluster this growth in ways which mitigate the negative effects of urban sprawl. The findings hold important implications for understanding regional growth and development processes, as well as the realization of state-level growth management policy goals.
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- 2019
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20. Motivated Localism: Polarization and Public Support for Intergovernmental Carbon Reduction Efforts
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Aaron Deslatte
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Urban Studies ,Sociology and Political Science - Abstract
Climate challenges in the 21st century have given rise to re-thinking the role of local governments in confronting larger-than-local challenges. However, anthropogenic climate change has become a weaponized partisan issue, and surveys show a growing partisan tribalization over climate science. Empowering local governments to take broader climate and sustainability actions is one avenue for addressing this. This study tests a localism hypothesis, which holds that citizens will be more supportive of local climate efforts when the benefits are internalized by the community. This deference to locally directed actions springs from the predisposition for decentralization of political authority widely attributed to localism, a directional goal of motivated reasoners which may feed into social identity, cohesion and shared community values. Through three survey experiments, the study finds citizens are more likely to favor continuation of local climate-related programs in the face of high performance and politicization at the federal level.
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- 2022
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21. The Road to Routinization: A Functional Collective Action Approach for Local Sustainability Planning and Performance Management
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Aaron Deslatte, Rachel M. Krause, and Christopher V. Hawkins
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Public Administration ,Political Science and International Relations - Abstract
When confronting complex challenges, governments use basic bureaucratic design heuristics -- centralization and specialization. The complexity of environmental and climate issues has drawn recent attention to the ways in which fragmented authority influences, and often challenges, the policy choices and institutional effectiveness of local governments. Sustainability planning and improved performance are potential benefits stemming from the integration of responsibilities across silos. Our central proposition is that institutionalized collective-action mechanisms, which break down siloed decision-making, foster more successful implementation of sustainability policies. We empirically examine this using two surveys of U.S. cities and find evidence that formal collective-action mechanisms positively mediate the relationship between broader agency involvement and more comprehensive performance information collection and use. However, we identify limits to the role of planning in fostering a performance culture. Specifically, cities that have engaged in broader planning conduct less-comprehensive performance management, likely due to measurement difficulty and goal ambiguity.
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- 2022
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22. Local Government: Municipal Charters
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Aaron Deslatte
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Local government ,Political science ,Public administration - Published
- 2020
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23. Exploring the Trade-Offs Local Governments Make in the Pursuit of Economic Growth and Equity
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Eric Stokan, Aaron Deslatte, and Megan E. Hatch
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Resource dependence theory ,Equity (economics) ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,Trade offs ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,International economics ,Local economic development ,Municipal level ,0506 political science ,Urban Studies ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics - Abstract
Economic development at the municipal level often necessitates that local governments make trade-offs between firm- and locality-based strategies. In recent decades, economic development researchers have described these efforts over time as exhibiting certain patterns and metaphors: as a series of waves, as embodying a type of lock-in effect, and as a policy layering process; however, the mechanisms behind these patterns remain unclear. This article draws upon 30 years of economic development policy decision making across the United States to understand what leads local governments to prioritize growth- or equity-oriented policies. We find that equity-enhancing economic development policies are more likely when local governments face less competitive pressure, have greater resource capacities, and experience greater intergovernmental involvement in the economic development planning process. Leveraging these factors can aid governments as they struggle to navigate a more sustainable path toward growth and equity.
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- 2020
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24. To shop or shelter? Issue framing effects and social-distancing preferences in the COVID-19 pandemic
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Aaron Deslatte
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,State (polity) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Social distance ,Pandemic ,TRIPS architecture ,Context (language use) ,Advertising ,Framing effect ,Preference ,media_common - Abstract
As a result of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes coronavirus disease (COVID-19), U.S. federal, state, and local governmental officials have struggled to coordinate consistent, coherent messaging for citizens to social-distance. The pandemic presents an important context for examining alternative communication frames employed by governments. This study presents results from an artefactual survey experiment in which public-health information regarding COVID-19 was transmitted to a panel of U.S. adult respondents via alternative issue frames and messengers. The findings highlight the importance of delivering consistent messages to the public. Public-health frames positively influence citizen preferences for avoiding unnecessary travel. Conversely, economic frames appear to have the opposite effect, increasing the preference to make unnecessary trips to shop. However, federal messengers appear to strengthen the framing effect relative to expert messengers.
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- 2020
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25. Land use institutions and social-ecological systems: A spatial analysis of local landscape changes in Poland
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Aaron Deslatte, Katarzyna Szmigiel-Rawska, António F. Tavares, Justyna Ślawska, Izabela Karsznia, Julita Łukomska, and Universidade do Minho
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Land use dynamics ,Growth machines ,Science & Technology ,Social-ecological systems ,Land Use Change Index (LUCI) ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Spatial analysis ,Forestry ,Poland ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Institutions ,Ciências Sociais::Ciências Políticas ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Understanding the complex impacts of human settlement patterns on social and natural systems is critical for immediate and long-term policy decisions and ecosystem preservation. Land-use patterns can be conceptualized as a form of integrated natural-human system within urban regions. However, extant scholarship on urban development and sprawl often overlooks the institutional diversity which exists across countries and regions. Development and land-use are politically charged governance issues, and these studies have rarely examined the influences of local political institutions on land-use changes across countries and over time. To help build cumulative knowledge on such urban systems, this study examines landscape change in Poland, which has undergone significant institutional evolution since the fall of the Soviet Union. Drawing from the urban and social-ecological systems (SES) literatures, we estimate spatio-temporal models of the interactive effects of socio-economic and political variables on land-use intensity. Consistent with an SES approach, the analysis finds that characteristics of the institutional design of land-use regulation – local autonomy, the productivity of the resource, and the predictability of land-use dynamics – influence more-intensive landscape changes over the study period (2006–2018). Specifically, both the electoral stability of the mayor and wealth of the community have a positive interactive effect on the conversion of landscapes to more urban uses. Development is also influenced by spatial and temporal dependency, and the availability of European Union “cohesion” investments intended to address economic inequality and promote sustainable development. The findings advance our understanding of the complexity of urban land-use patterns and sustainability goals., This work was supported by the Polish National Science Center [2018/29/B/HS4/01183]. Antonio ´ Tavares acknowledges the financial support from the Research Center in Political Science (UIDB/CPO/00758/2020), University of Minho/University of Evora ´ supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) and the Portuguese Ministry of Education and Science through national fun
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- 2022
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26. Managerial Friction and Land‐Use Policy Punctuations in the Fragmented Metropolis
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Aaron Deslatte
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Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Land use ,Punctuated equilibrium ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Fragmentation (computing) ,Land use policy ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,0506 political science ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economic geography ,media_common - Published
- 2018
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27. The Formation and Administration of Multipurpose Development Districts: Private Interests Through Public Institutions
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Tyler A. Scott, David P. Carter, and Aaron Deslatte
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Political science ,05 social sciences ,050602 political science & public administration ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Public institution ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Public administration ,Administration (government) ,0506 political science - Published
- 2018
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28. What do we know about urban sustainability? A research synthesis and nonparametric assessment
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Aaron Deslatte and William L. Swann
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05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,0507 social and economic geography ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Urban Studies ,Local government ,Item response theory ,Injury prevention ,Sustainability ,Business ,050703 geography ,Environmental planning - Abstract
Urban sustainability has become a burgeoning practical and scholarly enterprise over the last two decades. Yet, there have been few attempts to systematically assess what cumulative knowledge this ...
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- 2018
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29. The Collaboration Riskscape: Fragmentation, Problem Types and Preference Divergence in Urban Sustainability
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Aaron Deslatte and Richard C. Feiock
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Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Divergence (linguistics) ,05 social sciences ,Fragmentation (computing) ,Urban sustainability ,Collective action ,Metropolitan area ,Preference ,0506 political science ,Political science ,Sustainability ,050602 political science & public administration ,Regional science ,Polycentricity - Abstract
Local governmental efforts to achieve greater sustainability have come to play a prominent role within urbanized regions. Despite the prominence of collaboration and collective action in the inter-governmental literature, we know little about how the collaborative mechanisms used to address them are influenced by the configurations of horizontal, general-purpose governments and vertical, single-purpose governments. We combine national- and metropolitan-level analyses through a mixed-methods design to fill this lacuna. The first component examines how fragmentation influences choices of mechanisms for interlocal collaboration utilizing surveys of U.S. cities. The second component examines collaboration barriers between localities in a single metropolitan area through qualitative analysis of interviews conducted with twenty city managers in the Chicago metropolitan region, one of the most fragmented in the United States. These analyses offer evidence to support the conclusion that more fragmented regions may be better suited to overcome coordination risks and find more avenues for collaborative activities. However, preference heterogeneity within fragmented environments increases the risk of defection and thus offsets some advantages of polycentricity.
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- 2018
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30. Handing over the Keys: Nonprofit Economic Development Corporations and Their Implications for Accountability and Inclusion
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Alicia Schatteman, Aaron Deslatte, and Eric Stokan
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Public Administration ,Strategy and Management ,05 social sciences ,Public administration ,Local economic development ,0506 political science ,0502 economics and business ,Sustainability ,Accountability ,050602 political science & public administration ,Strategic management ,Business ,Organizational theory ,Fiscal sustainability ,Inclusion (education) ,050203 business & management ,Social equality - Abstract
Public organizations have explored service-delivery with nonprofit organizations to help alleviate the strain on their long-term fiscal sustainability. This interdependence has ramifications for fa...
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- 2018
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31. Hierarchies of Need in Sustainable Development: A Resource Dependence Approach for Local Governance
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Aaron Deslatte and Eric Stokan
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Sustainable development ,Resource dependence theory ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Context (language use) ,Urban sustainability ,02 engineering and technology ,Local governance ,0506 political science ,Urban Studies ,Scholarship ,Local government ,050602 political science & public administration ,Regional science ,Economics ,Economic system ,Social equality - Abstract
Urban sustainability is a burgeoning focus for urban scholarship but rarely examined within the larger context of local government economic activities. Why should cities focusing on cutback managem...
- Published
- 2017
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32. Context matters: A Bayesian analysis of how organizational environments shape the strategic management of sustainable development
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William L. Swann and Aaron Deslatte
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Sustainable development ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,Smart growth ,Urban sprawl ,Context (language use) ,Environmental economics ,Public administration ,0506 political science ,Strategic Choice Theory ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics ,Survey data collection ,Strategic management ,050203 business & management ,Strategic financial management - Abstract
Public administration scholars have argued the need for a ‘general theory’ linking strategic management to the context in which public organizations operate. Understanding the interplay between organizational contexts and strategic management responses to urban sprawl and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions remains an underexplored avenue for empirical advancement of this goal. Using 2015 survey data, we employ a novel Bayesian item response theory (IRT) approach to test how land use policy comprehensiveness, organizational capacities, leadership turnover, and environmental complexities affect the strategic management of smart growth policy in local governments. We find that public organizations harness political, administrative, and community capacities in varied combinations to better achieve their policy objectives, but these influences may not be complementary. Also, policy comprehensiveness generally relates to more strategic activity, while municipal executive turnover offers opportunities and threats to some smart growth strategies. Implications of this research are discussed.
- Published
- 2017
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33. Urban Pressures and Innovations: Sustainability Commitment in the Face of Fragmentation and Inequality
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Aaron Deslatte, Kathryn Wassel, and Richard C. Feiock
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Sustainable development ,Economic growth ,Public Administration ,Public economics ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Social sustainability ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,0506 political science ,Scholarship ,Scale (social sciences) ,Local government ,Sustainability ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics ,Social inequality ,Sustainability organizations - Abstract
Local government innovations occur within environments characterized by high service-need complexity and risk. The question of how broader environmental conditions influence governmental willingness or ability to innovate has been a long-standing concern within organizational, management, and policy scholarship. Although wealth and education are robust predictors of the propensity to engage in a wide range of local sustainability activities, the linkages among governmental fragmentation, social inequality, and sustainability policies are not well understood. This study focuses on the conditions both within and across city boundaries in urban regions which inhibit adoption of sustainable development innovations. We utilize a Bayesian item response theory approach to create a new scale measuring sustainability commitment by local governments in the United States. The analysis finds service-need complexity and capacity within local governments' organizational task environments have nonlinear influences on innovation in terms of both green building and social inclusion policy tools.
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- 2017
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34. A narrative method for analyzing transitions in urban water management: The case of the Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department
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Galen Treuer, Kathleen M. Ernst, Elizabeth Koebele, Margaret Garcia, Kim Manago, and Aaron Deslatte
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Engineering ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Environmental resource management ,Integrated water resources management ,Water supply ,02 engineering and technology ,Miami ,01 natural sciences ,020801 environmental engineering ,Water resources ,Sustainability ,Per capita ,Norm (social) ,business ,Water use ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Although the water management sector is often characterized as resistant to risk and change, urban areas across the United States are increasingly interested in creating opportunities to transition toward more sustainable water management practices. These transitions are complex and difficult to predict – the product of water managers acting in response to numerous biophysical, regulatory, and political factors within institutional constraints. Gaining a better understanding of how these transitions occur is crucial for continuing to improve water management. This paper presents a replicable methodology for analyzing how urban water utilities transition toward sustainability. The method combines standardized quantitative measures of variables that influence transitions with contextual qualitative information about a utility's unique decision making context to produce structured, data-driven narratives. Data-narratives document the broader context, the utility's pre-transition history, key events during an accelerated period of change, and the consequences of transition. Eventually, these narratives should be compared across cases to develop empirically-testable hypotheses about the drivers of and barriers to utility-level urban water management transition. The methodology is illustrated through the case of the Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department (WASD) in Miami-Dade County, Florida and its transition towards more sustainable water management in the 2000s, during which per capita water use declined, conservation measures were enacted, water rates increased, and climate adaptive planning became the new norm. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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- 2017
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35. Policy of Delay: Evidence from a Bayesian Analysis of Metropolitan Land-Use Choices
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Richard C. Feiock, Aaron Deslatte, and António F. Tavares
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Sustainable development ,Equity (economics) ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Public economics ,Land use ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Smart growth ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,15. Life on land ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Metropolitan area ,0506 political science ,Politics ,Local government ,11. Sustainability ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics ,Aggregate supply - Abstract
Do local policymakers strategically use delay in permitting development to forestall the growth machine? The mantras of smart growth and sustainable development assume local governments can balance the competing values of economic development, ecology, and equity interests in a community. We employ a political market framework to explain differences in local government land use decisions. This framework conceptualizes policy choices as resulting from the interplay between the aggregate policy demand by residents, developers, and environmental interests and the aggregate supply by government authorities. Delays can be imposed strategically through processes of development approval by city governments where industry strength and form of government vary within county-level service-delivery fragmentation. We utilize novel Bayesian multilevel modelling of data collected from 2007 and 2015 surveys of Florida city planners and find strong institutional effects and multilevel relationships.
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- 2016
- Full Text
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36. Is the Price Right? Gauging the Marketplace for Local Sustainable Policy Tools
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William L. Swann and Aaron Deslatte
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Sociology and Political Science ,Public economics ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Urban policy ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,0506 political science ,Urban Studies ,Extant taxon ,Political economy ,Local government ,Sustainability ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics ,Narrative ,Construct (philosophy) ,Social equality - Abstract
Local government sustainability has become a cause celebre in urban policy. Extant research has attempted to construct narratives of sustainable environmental, economic, and social equity motivatio...
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Boundaries and Speed Bumps: The Role of Modernized Counties Managing Growth in the Fragmented Metropolis
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Aaron Deslatte
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Sustainable development ,Sociology and Political Science ,Federalist ,Land use ,Service delivery framework ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Urban sprawl ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,0506 political science ,Urban Studies ,Local government ,050602 political science & public administration ,Operations management ,Business ,Environmental planning - Abstract
Many counties in the U.S. federalist system have morphed from a limited role in service delivery to a workhorse for municipal-style local government. They also facilitate development and sprawl, helping to shape development patterns of the modern fragmented metropolis. Why do counties accommodate development demand that deviates from long-term land-use plans intended to prevent sprawl? Utilizing panel data of county land-use changes in Florida, this study finds evidence that the decisions are shaped by both external competition for growth and internal institutional incentives. Fragmentation fuels more leapfrog development patterns on the urban fringe. Horizontal fragmentation encourages counties to compete for development, whereas vertical fragmentation via special districts facilitates such development through provision of services and reducing pressure for public officeholders to raise taxes. However, these fragmentation effects are also influenced by modernized institutions in counties such as home-rule charters and form of government.
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A bayesian approach for behavioral public administration: Citizen assessments of local government sustainability performance
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Aaron Deslatte
- Subjects
Government ,Motivated reasoning ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Perception ,Local government ,Sustainability ,Face (sociological concept) ,Public relations ,business ,Bayesian inference ,Democracy ,media_common - Abstract
Citizens are increasingly critical information-processors, and government performance information has become ubiquitous to the tenants of democratic anchorage and support for public programs. Yet human perceptions of governmental policies and outcomes are increasingly partisan and resistant to updating. Partisan motivated reasoning can lead to inaccurate or biased assessments of both the merit of specific policies and governmental performance. This article presents a case for the use of Bayesian inference for experimental work on information-processing. Combining previous findings with a new experimental design, this study examines whether provision of performance information on local government implementation of federally initiated sustainability efforts ameliorates the partisan motivated reasoning of citizens. Contrary to expectations, the study finds evidence of attitude-strengthening in the face of disconfirming performance as well as suggesting partisan cues may help citizens calibrate their evaluations.
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- 2019
- Full Text
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39. Reassessing 'City Limits' in Urban Public Policy
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Aaron Deslatte
- Subjects
Scholarship ,Equity (economics) ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Urban planning ,Cultural identity ,Political science ,Corporate governance ,Sustainability ,Public policy ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Public administration ,Urban politics - Abstract
Urban public policy continues to explore the problems of urban growth and decline in a multidisciplinary fashion, focusing multiple theoretical lenses on questions of governance and division of authority as well as the practical applications for areas of policy specialization. This article reviews recent articles on income, housing, and racial/ethnic stratification, which share a common link of mobility-based prescriptions. It also reviews the role sustainability, equity, and cultural norms play in scholarship. The field is moving in a direction that integrates classical rational choice and sociological explanations for policies addressing sustainability and equity, the role of cultural identity in urban renewal efforts, and long-standing problems of citizen participation in government decision making.
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- 2015
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40. Florida’s Growth Management Experience: From Top-Down Direction to Laissez Faire Land Use
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Aaron Deslatte
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Sustainable development ,Laissez-faire ,Growth management ,Land use ,Public economics ,Local government ,Political science ,Corporate governance ,Top-down and bottom-up design ,Space (commercial competition) - Abstract
Land use and development pose fundamental long-term governance challenges for city regions across the world. This chapter traces the recent history of reforms in Florida’s growth management regime, advancing understanding of the containment tools employed by cities and the strategies that underlie these configurations. Utilizing surveys of local government planners from three time periods (2002, 2007, and 2015), the chapter examines land-use choices before and after the Great Recession and a state-level deregulatory reform of Florida’s once-heralded growth management system in 2011 to examine variation in land-use regulations at the local level. The patterns have implications for future research and practice and suggest that the durability of land-management tools intended to stave off development and preserve open space may need to be carefully examined apart from smart-growth approaches which assume development is inevitable.
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Capturing Structural and Functional Diversity Through Institutional Analysis
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Cali Curley, Richard C. Feiock, Aaron Deslatte, David P. Carter, Christopher M. Weible, and Tanya Heikkila
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Sociology and Political Science ,Corporate governance ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Charter ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Public administration ,0506 political science ,Urban Studies ,Functional diversity ,050602 political science & public administration ,Institutional analysis ,Position (finance) ,Sociology - Abstract
City charters affect the governance of municipal systems in complex ways. Current descriptions and typologies developed to study city charter structures simplify the diverse types and configurations of institutional rules underlying charter designs. This research note demonstrates a more detailed approach for studying the design of city charters using analytical methods based on the Institutional Analysis and Development Framework. This approach is illustrated with a pilot study of institutional rules in municipal charters that define the roles and duties of mayors. The findings reveal that city charters exhibit great institutional diversity, particularly within strong mayor cities. We conclude with a research agenda that could generate a more precise and rigorous understanding of the relationship between the different configurations of institutions of city charters and the politics, governance, and performance of municipalities.
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- 2014
- Full Text
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42. Towards urban water sustainability: Analyzing management transitions in Miami, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles
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Kathleen M. Ernst, Kimberly F. Manago, Galen Treuer, Margaret Garcia, Elizabeth Koebele, and Aaron Deslatte
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Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Transition (fiction) ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Water supply ,Climate change ,Context (language use) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Miami ,Contextual design ,Socio-hydrology ,Political science ,Sustainability ,business ,Environmental planning - Abstract
As climate change challenges the sustainability of existing water supplies, many cities must transition toward more sustainable water management practices to meet demand. However, scholarly knowledge of the factors that drive such transitions is lacking, in part due to the dearth of comparative analyses in the existing transitions literature. This study seeks to identify common factors associated with transitions toward sustainability in urban water systems by comparing transitions in three cases: Miami, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles. For each case, we develop a data-driven narrative that integrates case-specific contextual data with standardized, longitudinal metrics of exposures theorized to drive transition. We then compare transitions across cases, focusing on periods of accelerated change (PoACs), to decouple generic factors associated with transition from those unique to individual case contexts. From this, we develop four propositions about transitions toward sustainable urban water management. We find that concurrent exposure to water stress and heightened public attention increases the probability of a PoAC (1), while other factors commonly expected to drive transition (e.g. financial stress) are unrelated (2). Moreover, the timing of exposure alignment (3) and the relationship between exposures and transition (4) may vary according to elements of the system’s unique context, including the institutional and infrastructure design and hydro-climatic setting. These propositions, as well as the methodology used to derive them, provide a new model for future research on how cities respond to climate-driven water challenges.
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- 2019
- Full Text
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43. Inequality as a Barrier to Green Building Policy Adoptions in Cities
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Aaron Deslatte, Kathryn Wassel, and Richard C. Feiock
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Inequality ,Public economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Economics ,Green building ,media_common - Published
- 2015
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44. Three Sides of the Same Coin? A Bayesian Analysis of Strategic Management, Comprehensive Planning, and Inclusionary Values in Land Use
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Aaron Deslatte, William L. Swann, and Richard C. Feiock
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Marketing ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Land use ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Bayesian probability ,Environmental resource management ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,0506 political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Comprehensive planning ,Strategic management ,business - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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