The Stone Scholar Award Committee cordially invites all SIAM members to nominate candidates for the Donald Stone Distinguished Scholar Award for 2018. This prestigious award, given since 1981, recognizes (1) significant contributions to the practice and/or study of intergovernmental relations over a substantial period of time and (2) contributions that have made an impact on the practice and/or study of intergovernmental management as a whole rather than only on a specific organization, institution, or function.
Donald C. Stone (1903-1995) was a major and beloved figure in twentieth-century public administration. He was the founder of the American Public Works Association (APWA), served as the first Director of the Public Administration Service, and was a principal architect of the Executive Office of the President (EOP) in 1939 based on the 1937 recommendations of the Brownlow Commission. He was the first Director of the Division of Administrative Management of the Bureau of the Budget within the EOP, worked as Director of Administration of the Marshall Plan in 1948, helped found the National Academy of Public Administration in 1967, and served as Dean of the School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Pittsburgh.
The Section on Intergovernmental Administration and Management (SIAM) established the Stone awards in 1980. The first awards were made in 1981. The principal criteria for the Practitioner and Scholar awards are:
- Significant contributions to the practice and/or study of intergovernmental relations over a substantial period of time.
- Contributions that have made an impact on the practice and/or study of intergovernmental management as a whole rather than only on a specific organization, institution, or function.
Please send us your nominations no later than January 29, 2018, to David Swindell, Chairperson, at david.swindell@asu.edu, Angela Evans at dean.a.evans@austin.utexas.edu, and Don Kettl at kettle@umd.edu. Thank you!
SIAM’s DONALD C. STONE SCHOLAR AWARDEES
YEAR | PRACTITIONERS | SCHOLARS |
1981 | Ray Remy | David B. Walker |
1982 | Donna Shalala Alan R. Siegle | Deil S. Wright |
1983 | Edward T. Kelly | Mavis Mann Reeves |
1984 | Wayne F. Anderson | Martha Derthick |
1985 | Sen. David F. Durenberger | Daniel J. Elazar |
1986 | Gov. Richard Snelling | Richard Nathan |
1987 | Gov. Bruce Babbitt | Neal Peirce |
1988 | Louis Gambaccini | George E. Peterson |
1989 | John Herbers | Samuel H. Beer |
1990 | Frank H. Shafroth | Paul E. Peterson |
1991 | George Van Dusen | John Kincaid |
1992 | Zachary Taylor | Thomas R. Dye |
1993 | William Edgar | David Beam |
1994 | Carl W. Stenberg III | Beverly A. Cigler |
1995 | Gov. Parris Glendening | Dale Krane |
1996 | Gerald Miller | Steven D. Gold |
1997 | William G. Coleman | Joseph F. Zimmerman |
1998 | Patricia S. Florestano | Ann O’M. Bowman David Morgan |
1999 | Scott Fosler | Laurence O’Toole |
2000 | William H. Hansell, Jr. | Robert Agranoff |
2001 | William Dodge | Susan A. MacManus |
2002 | Richard Sheirer | Beryl Radin |
2003 | Anthony Griffin | Richard Campbell |
2004 | Jeffrey Tryens | Charldean Newell |
2005 | David Warm | Donald F. Kettl |
2006 | Paul Posner | Myrna Mandell |
2007 | Alan Ehrenhalt | James Svara |
2008 | Bruce D. McDowell | Carol S. Weissert |
2009 | Raymond C. Scheppach | Charles Wise |
2010 | William R. Barnes | Richard Feiock |
2011 | No Award | No Award |
2012 | Sam Mamet | Frank J. Thompson |
2013 | Bill Stafford | Kurt Thurmaier |
2014 | No Award | No Award |
2015 | Peter Austin | Michael Pagano |
2016 | Rajesh Mohan | Tim Conlan |
2017 | Norton Bonaparte | Jered Carr |