State and Local Government Review: Podcasts, Young Scholar Outreach Program, Article Visibility and Impact, Social Media
Online usage statistics
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2012
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Full-text
downloads*
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2013
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Full-text
downloads*
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2014
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Full-text
downloads*
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Jan
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1,100
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Jan
|
2,082
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Jan
|
1,246
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Feb
|
1,325
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Feb
|
1,568
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Feb
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1,713
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Mar
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1,394
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Mar
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1,471
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Mar
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2,249
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Apr
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2,190
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Apr
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1,906
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Apr
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1,956
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May
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1,697
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May
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1,185
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May
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1,363
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Jun
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981
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Jun
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1,105
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Jun
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1,230
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Jul
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907
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Jul
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1,061
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Jul
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1,058
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Aug
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1,019
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Aug
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1,370
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Aug
|
954
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Sep
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1,547
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Sep
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1,883
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Sep
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2,284
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Oct
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2,862
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Oct
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2,386
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Oct
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2,405
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Nov
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1,773
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Nov
|
1,723
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Nov
|
2,072
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Dec
|
1,086
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Dec
|
1,181
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Dec
|
1,250
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Total
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17,881
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Total
|
18,921
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Total
|
19,780
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* Full-text downloads include both HTML and PDF article usage
** Total accesses include: abstract, home page, and TOC views; searches; and, article downloads
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announcement of the SLGR 2015 Special Issue. We hope this new blog will provide an online venue for more in-depth discussions of SLGR articles and podcasts, including Question & Answer sessions with authors and further interaction between authors, editors, and readers. Please join the SLGR discussion online!
CALL FOR PROPOSALS: 2015 Special Issue of State and Local Government Review on Emerging from the Great Recession
- From a governance perspective, what exactly does the term economic polarization mean? Does this mean that there is both a decline of a “middle class” and a great divide between the lower and upper income classes? What are the different manifestations of this phenomenon such as the degree of loss of the middle class as well as economic polarization? What stage or level of economic polarization can result in policy or governance problems for subnational governments?
- To what extent do taxing and spending policies at subnational levels redistribute burdens and benefits?
- What are the specific ways/policy areas that polarization is evident (i.e., education, housing, stagnant wages, etc.)?
- Has there been a change in the level of middle class loss or economic polarization? If so, when did these changes begin, are they increasing, or is it stable or declining? What are the best techniques to document or monitor these changes?
- What factors contribute to increased economic polarization–actions by international, national, or subnational governments?
- What are the implications of middle class loss and/ or economic polarization for subnational governance-i.e. what problems has this caused for subnational governments?
- What actions have or could subnational governments take to reduce the loss of the middle class and economic polarization as well reduce the impact on their citizens?
- Why hasn’t societal and economic information shown a capacity to scale effectively across jurisdictional, operational, and organizational boundaries? Are we missing major policies and monitoring procedures that would identify this process more effectively, leading to more timely policy action?
Introducing Our Stone Award Recipients for 2015
Please join our colleagues at the section meeting to honor the contributions of these three recipients to our field at our section meeting at the ASPA Conference on
March 8, 2015 at 4:45 p.m. in the Comiskey Room at the Hyatt Regency, Chicago.
Scholar
Michael A. Pagano is Dean of the College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs at the University of Illinois at Chicago, professor of public administration, Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration (which was chartered by Congress to assist federal, state, and local governments in improving their effectiveness, efficiency, and accountability), former co-editor of a journal on urban issues called Urban Affairs Review, and Faculty Fellow of UICs Great Cities Institute. He has published five books, including Metropolitan Resilience in a Time of Economic Turmoil , Cityscapes and Capital and The Dynamics of Federalism, and over 80 articles on urban finance, capital budgeting, federalism, transportation policy, infrastructure, urban development and fiscal policy; since 1991, he has written the annual City Fiscal Conditions report for the National League of Cities and between 2003-2008 he wrote a column called The Third Rail for State Tax Notes, which examined contemporary local government fiscal issues; he has delivered more than one hundred papers and speeches; and received funding from John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the National Research Council, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, Pew Charitable Trusts, Brookings Institution, CEOs for Cities, National League of Cities, Chicago Community Trust, U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, and elsewhere.
He serves on a variety of professional organizations, including the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, the Metropolitan Planning Council (Chicago), the Pension Committee of the Civic Federation, and the Urban Land Institute. He earned a B.A. from the Pennsylvania State University and a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin.
Call for Information: SIAM Update
Call for Information – SIAM Update
Please help us provide exposure to your professional and academic achievements by contributing to the next issue of SIAM Update. We are seeking to include information on the following topics:
· Publication announcements for new reports, books and articles
· Information on new research or outreach projects you are starting
· Calls for papers for conference and workshops you are organizing
· Invited lectures or other significant presentations you have given
· Paper presentations or panel participation at conferences
· Grants, fellowships, or awards you have received
· Promotions or new positions you have accepted
· Faculty additions, retirements, and other relevant news about your department or program
· Election to an officer position in a local ASPA chapter
· Students’ professional accomplishments, including new jobs and promotions, involvement in major research projects, important public sector initiatives, and research publications.
If you are engaged in activities that will be of interest to your fellow members or students, please send materials for the email update to siam.uic.cuppa@gmail.com by end of the day on Monday, February 23, 2015.