Friday, November 2, 2018

2018 PATIMES Columns by Benjamin Deitchman

Public Administration in The Good Place

Public Administration in The Good Place
Public administration has a role in the afterlife — at least on the critically-acclaimed network comedy The Good Place.…

Social Media as a Social Good

Social Media as a Social Good
Post on Facebook, “The Facebook is excellent.” Tweet, “Twitter is great.” Caption an Instagram photograph, “I love Instagram.” See how few likes, favorites or otherwise positive reactions appear compared to…

Touch-a-Truck: A Tactile Introduction to the Public Service

Touch-a-Truck: A Tactile Introduction to the Public Service
Touch-a-truck activities also offer a model of how government can and does serve the citizenry. Popular culture presents to children an idealized version of the work of police officers, firefighters…

World Cup Soccer and Policymaking: Strategies for Success

World Cup Soccer and Policymaking: Strategies for Success
Winning the World Cup, or merely qualifying, as the United States failed to do for this summer’s competition, requires tactics and principles that can provide lessons for successful policymaking and…

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Reviews of Climate and Clean Energy Policy: State Institutions and Economic Implications

Publius: The Journal of Federalism:


Climate and Clean Energy Policy: State Institutions and Economic Implications, by Benjamin H. Deitchman
Political Opportunities for Climate Policy: California, New York, and the Federal Government, by Roger Karapin

Climate and Clean Energy Policy: State Institutions and Economic Implications
Publius: The Journal of Federalism, Volume 48, Issue 4, 1 September 2018, Pages e6,https://doi.org/10.1093/publius/pjy027

This context makes the publication of a pair of books written prior to the 2016 election all the more important. These complementary contributions by Benjamin Deitchman and Roger Karapin provide valuable insights into state climate policy and combine to offer a solid foundation to understand what has transpired to date and where we might head next. Both make clear that states have enormous roles to play in influencing greenhouse gas emissions, whether or not their policies are expressly aimed at climate considerations. Both volumes consider a broad set of policies that can curb carbon dioxide or related greenhouse gas releases. Karapin divides these policies between those that are “explicit” in their climate focus such as carbon cap-and-trade or are “implicit” such as renewable energy mandates that may be focused primarily on energy policy or economic development while also addressing climate.

The American Review of Public Administration:

Book Review: 

Climate and Clean Energy Policy: 

State Institutions and Economic Implications

First Published November 16, 2017 Book Review https://doi.org/10.1177/0275074017741541

In Climate and Clean Energy Policy: State Institutions and Economic Implications, Benjamin Deitchman presents a current snapshot of U.S. energy and climate policy, in which he features prominently the role of state leadership, as well as the policy instruments designed by states, and the manner in which politics and federalism have shaped the policy process. In an ambitious undertaking to describe the intricacies of modern U.S. energy and climate policy, Deitchman highlights many of the important trends and debates that have arisen within this realm over the past 20 or so years.

Monday, April 30, 2018

"Intergovernmental Relations in Transition Reflections and Directions" On Sale Now

Intergovernmental Relations in Transition: Reflections and Directions (Paperback) book cover

https://www.routledge.com/Intergovernmental-Relations-in-Transition-Reflections-and-Directions/Stenberg-Hamilton/p/book/9780815396437

Table of Contents

1. Intergovernmental Relations in Transition
[David K. Hamilton and Carl W. Stenberg]
Part 1. Phases of IGR Revisited
2. Intergovernmental Relations in the Early 21st Century: Lingering Images of Earlier Phases or Emergence of a New Phase?
[J. Edwin Benton]
3. Why Coercion and Cooperation Coexist in American Federalism
[John Kincaid]
4. Why We Fight: Conflict and "Coping" in 21st Century Intergovernmental Relations
[Brendan F. Burke and Jeffrey L. Brudney]
Part 2. Fiscal and Institutional Issues
5. Scarcity and the Federal System
[Paul L. Posner]
6. Putting the "R" Back in IGR: The Great Recession and Intergovernmental "Relationships"
[Bruce J. Perlman, Michael J. Scicchitano, and Yahong Zhang]
Part 3. Intergovernmental Management Cases
7. Partisan Polarization, Administrative Capacity, and State Discretion in the Affordable Care Act
[Dale Krane and Shihyun Noh]
8. The Diffusion of Federal Regulation through Contracts: The Case of Food Safety Policy
[Jocelyn M. Johnston and Rebecca Yurman]
9. Clean Energy and Growth through State and Local Implementation
[Benjamin H. Deitchman]
10. Bottom-up Federalism: An Examination of U.S. Local Governments’ Climate Change Policy
[Benoy Jacob, Brian Gerber, and Sam Gallaher]
Part 4. Laboratories of Democracy at Work
11. The Legislative Transformation of State-Local Relations
[Ann O’M. Bowman and Richard C. Kearney]
12. Pulling the Lever: The States’ Role in Catalyzing Local Change
[Ricardo S. Morse and Carl W. Stenberg]
13. Professional Development Applied Projects: State-Level Laboratories of Democracy
[Susan Paddock]
Part 5. Reflections from the Trenches
14. The Unraveling of the Intergovernmental System: A Practitioner’s Observations
[Donald Borut]
15. American Federalism Without a System of Intergovernmental Relations
[Parris N. Glendening]
16. Back to the Future?

[Carl W. Stenberg and David K. Hamilton]