Contact information of John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Serial Information
Pricing information: individual rates available on request
Series handle: RePEc:wly:jpamgt
ISSN: 0276-8739
Citations RSS feed: at CitEc
Impact factors
Access and download statisticsTop item:
Corrections
All material on this site has been provided by the respective publishers and authors. You can help
correct errors and omissions. When requesting a correction, please mention this item's handle: RePEc:wly:jpamgt. See general information about how to correct material in RePEc.
For technical questions regarding this item, or to correct its authors, title, abstract, bibliographic or download information, contact: Wiley Content Delivery (email available below). General contact details of provider: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/34787/home .
Content
2008, Volume 27, Issue 4
- 943-944 Charles E. Metcalf's response to David A. Reingold
by Charles E. Metcalf
- 945-945 Professional practice
by Richard P. Nathan
- 945-960 Does more (or even better) information lead to better budgeting? A new perspective
by Philip G. Joyce
- 960-962 Better information is needed to make better federal budget decisions
by Kenneth Apfel
- 962-965 Federal fiscal problems are structural and immune to repairs of budgeting processes
by Donald W. Moran
- 965-967 Federal budget decisions are bad because it is much harder to make good choices
by Rudolph G. Penner
- 967-970 Federal budgeting: When do the electoral and analytic imperatives meet?
by Paul Posner
- 970-972 The federal budget: The erosion of bipartisan fiscal discipline
by Alice M. Rivlin
- 972-975 Policy analysis can inform federal budget choices, but only if there is political will
by Philip G. Joyce
- 976-977 The 2006 Park City APPAM spring conference (IV)
by Michael O'Hare
- 977-982 Law, ethics, and craft skills
by Eric R. Jensen
- 983-992 Discussion report: Law, ethics, and craft skills
by Roland J. Cole
- 992-1003 Practitioners' roles, internships, and practicum courses in public policy and management education
by Robert Garris & Janice Madden & William M. Rodgers III
- 1004-1008 Discussion report: Practitioners in the degree program
by Kenneth Apfel
- 1009-1026 Undergraduate and doctoral education in public policy: What? Why? Why not? Whereto?
by Joseph Cordes & Dylan Conger & Helen Ladd & Michael Luger
- 1027-1030 Discussion report: The “bookends”: The policy Ph.D. and the bachelor's degrees
by Joseph Cordes & Dylan Conger
- 1030-1044 Pedagogy for policy analysis and management
by Michael O'Hare
- 1045-1049 Discussion report: Pedagogy for policy analysis and management
by Michael Lipsky
- 1050-1053 Managing Within Networks: Adding Value to Public Organizations, by Robert Agranoff. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2007, 274 pp., $26.95, paperback
by Hal G. Rainey
September 2008, Volume 27, Issue 4
- 717-718 Notes from the Editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 719-723 Introduction to the research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 724-750 Three conditions under which experiments and observational studies produce comparable causal estimates: New findings from within‐study comparisons
by Thomas D. Cook & William R. Shadish & Vivian C. Wong
- 751-770 Ranking state fiscal structures using theory and evidence
by Neil Bania & Joe A. Stone
- 771-792 In‐state tuition for the undocumented: Education effects on Mexican young adults
by Neeraj Kaushal
- 793-818 The narrowing gap in New York City teacher qualifications and its implications for student achievement in high‐poverty schools
by Donald Boyd & Hamilton Lankford & Susanna Loeb & Jonah Rockoff & James Wyckoff
- 848-866 Minimum wages and the economic well‐being of single mothers
by Joseph J. Sabia
- 867-894 Do social policy reforms have different impacts on employment and welfare use as economic conditions change?
by Chris M. Herbst
- 895-925 Does housing matter for poor families? A critical summary of research and issues still to be resolved
by Sandra J. Newman
- 926-926 Can government‐sponsored evaluations be independent?
by Richard P. Nathan
- 927-934 Threats to independence and objectivity of government‐supported evaluation and policy research
by Charles E. Metcalf
- 934-941 Can government‐supported evaluation and policy research be independent?
by David A. Reingold
- 942-943 David A. Reingold's response to Charles E. Metcalf
by David A. Reingold
- 943-944 Charles E. Metcalf's response to David A. Reingold
by Charles E. Metcalf
- 945-945 Professional practice
by Richard P. Nathan
- 945-960 Does more (or even better) information lead to better budgeting? A new perspective
by Philip G. Joyce
- 960-962 Better information is needed to make better federal budget decisions
by Kenneth Apfel
- 962-965 Federal fiscal problems are structural and immune to repairs of budgeting processes
by Donald W. Moran
- 965-967 Federal budget decisions are bad because it is much harder to make good choices
by Rudolph G. Penner
- 967-970 Federal budgeting: When do the electoral and analytic imperatives meet?
by Paul Posner
- 970-972 The federal budget: The erosion of bipartisan fiscal discipline
by Alice M. Rivlin
- 972-975 Policy analysis can inform federal budget choices, but only if there is political will
by Philip G. Joyce
- 976-977 The 2006 Park City APPAM spring conference (IV)
by Michael O'Hare
- 977-982 Law, ethics, and craft skills
by Eric R. Jensen
- 983-992 Discussion report: Law, ethics, and craft skills
by Roland J. Cole
- 992-1003 Practitioners' roles, internships, and practicum courses in public policy and management education
by Robert Garris & Janice Madden & William M. Rodgers III
- 1004-1008 Discussion report: Practitioners in the degree program
by Kenneth Apfel
- 1009-1026 Undergraduate and doctoral education in public policy: What? Why? Why not? Whereto?
by Joseph Cordes & Dylan Conger & Helen Ladd & Michael Luger
- 1027-1030 Discussion report: The “bookends”: The policy Ph.D. and the bachelor's degrees
by Joseph Cordes & Dylan Conger
- 1045-1049 Discussion report: Pedagogy for policy analysis and management
by Michael Lipsky
- 1050-1053 Managing Within Networks: Adding Value to Public Organizations, by Robert Agranoff. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2007, 274 pp., $26.95, paperback
by Hal G. Rainey
2008, Volume 27, Issue 3
- 453-456 Introduction to the research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 457-478 A strategic response to class size reduction: Combination classes and student achievement in California
by David Sims
- 479-497 Marriage patterns among unwed mothers: Before and after PRWORA
by Deborah Roempke Graefe & Daniel T. Lichter
- 498-520 The effects of an employer subsidy on employment outcomes: A study of the work opportunity and welfare-to-work tax credits
by Sarah Hamersma
- 521-535 Cognitive and non-cognitive predictors of success in adult education programs: Evidence from experimental data with low-income welfare recipients
by Lindsey Jeanne Leininger & Ariel Kalil
- 536-555 Causes of Urban Sprawl in the United States: Auto reliance as compared to natural evolution, flight from blight, and local revenue reliance
by Robert W. Wassmer
- 556-576 Do Job Corps performance measures track program impacts?
by Peter Z. Schochet & John A. Burghardt
- 577-605 The dynamics of poverty in the United States: A review of data, methods, and findings
by Stephanie Riegg Cellini & Signe-Mary McKernan & Caroline Ratcliffe
- 606-606 The role of random assignment in social policy research
by Richard P. Nathan
- 607-610 Nathan response to Robinson Hollister's opening statement
by Richard P. Nathan
- 611-615 Hollister response to Richard Nathan's opening statement
by Robinson Hollister
- 616-616 The 2006 Park City APPAM spring conference (III)
by Michael O'Hare
- 617-624 Discussion report: Do we try to teach our students too much?
by John Mendeloff
- 624-635 Public management, politics, and the policy process in the public affairs curriculum
by Jeffrey D. Straussman
- 635-640 Discussion report: Process, politics, and management in the curriculum
by Beryl A. Radin
- 640-669 Quantitative methods, economics, and or models
by Anand Desai
- 670-675 Discussion report: Quantitative methods, statistics, and or models
by Marvin B. Mandell
- 676-682 Conflict resolution, alternative dispute techniques, and modes of consensus building
by Alice M. Rivlin
- 683-686 Discussion report: Conflict resolution, alternative dispute techniques, and modes of consensus building
by Judy Feder & Astrid E. Merget
- 687-690 The Sandbox Investment: The Preschool Movement and Kids-First Politics , by David L. Kirp, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 333 pp., $26.95 hardcover
by Jane Waldfogel
- 690-692 Measuring the Performance of the Hollow State , by David G. Frederickson and H. George Frederickson, Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2006, 218 pp., $26.95 paper
by John D. Donahue
- 692-695 Paying the Tab: The Costs and Benefits of Alcohol Control , by Philip J. Cook, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007, 278 pp., $35 hardcover
by Mark A. R. Kleiman
2008, Volume 27, Issue 2
- 227-228 Notes from the Editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 229-232 Introduction to the research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 233-254 Presidential address: How to improve poverty measurement in the United States
by Rebecca M. Blank
- 255-276 Impacts of abstinence education on teen sexual activity, risk of pregnancy, and risk of sexually transmitted diseases
by Christopher Trenholm & Barbara Devaney & Kenneth Fortson & Melissa Clark & Lisa Quay & Justin Wheeler
- 277-303 Reassessing the WIC effect: Evidence from the Pregnancy Nutrition Surveillance System
by Ted Joyce & Andrew Racine & Cristina Yunzal-Butler
- 304-325 Does homeownership counseling affect the prepayment and default behavior of affordable mortgage borrowers?
by Roberto Quercia & Jonathan Spader
- 326-353 Does the public sector outperform the nonprofit and for-profit sectors? Evidence from a national panel study on nursing home quality and access
by Anna A. Amirkhanyan & Hyun Joon Kim & Kristina T. Lambright
- 354-375 Welfare and child support: Complements, not substitutes
by Maria Cancian & Daniel R. Meyer & Emma Caspar
- 376-400 Vertical equity consequences of very high cigarette tax increases: If the poor are the ones smoking, how could cigarette tax increases be progressive?
by Gregory J. Colman & Dahlia K. Remler
- 401-415 The role of random assignment in social policy research
by Richard P. Nathan
- 416-417 The 2006 Park City APPAM spring conference (II)
by Michael O'Hare
- 417-433 Demand for masters of public policy in public service
by Angela M. Evans
- 434-437 Discussion session: Demand for masters of public policy in public service
by Erik A. Devereux
- 438-445 Managing the enterprise: Challenges facing public policy and management school leadership
by Sandra O. Archibald
- 446-448 Discussion session: Managing the enterprise
by Michael Nacht
- 449-452 Moderating the Debate: Rationality and the Promise of American Education , by Michael J. Feuer, Cambridge, MA: Harvard Education Press, 2006, 131 pp., $24.95, paperback
by Anand Desai
2008, Volume 27, Issue 1
- 1-1 Notes from the editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 2-6 Introduction to research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 7-19 Debt, democratization, and development in Latin America: How policy can affect global warming
by René W. Aubourg & David H. Good & Kerry Krutilla
- 20-39 Lowering blood alcohol content levels to save lives: The European experience
by Daniel Albalate
- 40-62 Reconciliation of income and consumption data in poverty measurement
by Richard Bavier
- 63-81 The relationship between income and material hardship
by James X. Sullivan & Lesley Turner & Sheldon Danziger
- 82-103 Direct certification in the national school lunch program expands access for children
by Philip Gleason
- 104-121 The negative impacts of starting middle school in sixth grade
by Philip J. Cook & Robert MacCoun & Clara Muschkin & Jacob Vigdor
- 122-154 An effectiveness-based evaluation of five state pre-kindergarten programs
by Vivian C. Wong & Thomas D. Cook & W. Steven Barnett & Kwanghee Jung
- 155-170 Mental health and substance abuse insurance parity for federal employees: How did health plans respond?
by Colleen L. Barry & M. Susan Ridgely
- 171-171 The 2006 park city appam spring conference
by Michael O'Hare
- 172-187 Challenges to public policy and public management education
by John W. Ellwood
- 187-204 MPP programs emerging around the world19
by Iris Geva-May & Greta Nasi & Alex Turrini & Claudia Scott
- 205-214 Public policy education goes global: A multi-dimensional challenge
by Scott A. Fritzen
- 215-218 The Foundation: A Great American Secret , by Joel L. Fleishman, New York: Public Affairs, 2007, xxiv + 357 pp., $27.95, hardback
by Peter Frumkin
- 218-221 Full Disclosure: The Perils and Promise of Transparency , by Archon Fung, Mary Graham, and David Weil, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007, 282 pp., $28.00, hardcover
by Lisa Blomgren Bingham
- 222-225 Public Management: Old and New , by Laurence E. Lynn Jr., New York|London: Routledge, 2006, 210 pp., $35.95, paperback
by Theo Toonen
2007, Volume 26, Issue 4
- 729-730 Notes from the editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 731-736 Introduction to research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 737-754 The implications of differences between employer and worker employment|earnings reports for policy evaluation
by Geoffrey L. Wallace & Robert Haveman
- 755-774 Canada's voluntary ARET program: Limited success despite industry cosponsorship
by Werner Antweiler & Kathryn Harrison
- 775-790 The stigma of public programs: Does a separate S-CHIP program reduce it?
by Patricia Ketsche & E. Kathleen Adams & Karen Minyard & Rebecca Kellenberg
- 791-810 Child support enforcement policy and unmarried fathers' employment in the underground and regular economies
by Lauren M. Rich & Irwin Garfinkel & Qin Gao
- 811-830 Redlining or risk? A spatial analysis of auto insurance rates in Los Angeles
by Paul M. Ong & Michael A. Stoll
- 831-860 Public housing, health, and health behaviors: Is there a connection?
by Angela R. Fertig & David A. Reingold
- 861-886 The impact of child SSI enrollment on household outcomes
by Mark G. Duggan & Melissa Schettini Kearney
- 887-908 Child care quality in different state policy contexts
by Elizabeth Rigby & Rebecca M. Ryan & Jeanne Brooks-Gunn
- 909-950 Teacher performance pay: A review
by Michael J. Podgursky & Matthew G. Springer
- 951-951 Should government promote marriage?
by Sara McLanahan
- 952-955 Strengthening marriage is an appropriate social policy goal
by Paul R. Amato
- 956-960 Should government promote marriage?
by Frank F. Furstenberg
- 961-962 Response to Furstenberg
by Paul R. Amato
- 963-964 Response to Amato
by Frank F. Furstenberg
- 965-967 Strategic Giving: The Art and Science of Philanthropy , by Peter Frumkin (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006), 458 pp., $39 cloth
by Kirsten A. Grønbjerg
- 968-970 Redefining Health Care: Creating Value-Based Competition on Results , by Michael E. Porter and Elizabeth Olmstead Teisberg, Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 2006, 506 pp., $35 hardback
by James M. Verdier
- 971-974 The Nonprofit Sector: A Research Handbook , Second Edition, edited by Walter W. Powell and Richard Steinberg, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2006, 672 pp., $65.00 cloth
by Lee Harper & Michael Bisesi
- 975-980 Work over Welfare: The Inside Story of the 1996 Welfare Reform Law , by Ron Haskins. Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 2006, 450 pp., $32.95 hardcover
by Michael Wisemanx
2007, Volume 26, Issue 3
- 449-449 Notes from the editor
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 451-454 Introduction to research articles
by Maureen A. Pirog
- 455-477 How close is close enough? Evaluating propensity score matching using data from a class size reduction experiment
by Elizabeth Ty Wilde & Robinson Hollister
- 479-506 A “politically robust” experimental design for public policy evaluation, with application to the Mexican Universal Health Insurance program
by Gary King & Emmanuela Gakidou & Nirmala Ravishankar & Ryan T. Moore & Jason Lakin & Manett Vargas & Martha María Téllez-Rojo & Juan Eugenio Hernández Ávila & Mauricio Hernández Ávila & Héctor Hernández Llamas
- 507-525 Uncertain policy for an uncertain world: The case of social security
by John Sabelhaus & Julie Topoleski
- 527-555 The social security earnings test and work incentives
by Hugo Benítez-Silva & Frank Heiland
- 557-573 The performance of charter schools in Wisconsin
by John Witte & David Weimer & Arnold Shober & Paul Schlomer
- 575-598 Welfare and child support program knowledge gaps reduce program effectiveness
by Daniel R. Meyer & Maria Cancian & Kisun Nam
- 599-612 Income tax policy and charitable giving
by Arthur C. Brooks
- 613-631 Nonpoor children in head start: Explanations and implications
by Douglas J. Besharov & Jeffrey S. Morrow
- 633-671 Early childhood care and education: Lessons and puzzles
by William T. Gormley Jr.
- 673-674 How should we read the evidence about head start? three views
by Richard P. Nathan
- 674-677 Revving up head start: Lessons from recent research
by W. Steven Barnett
- 678-681 Head start: Mend it, don't expand it (yet)
by Douglas J. Besharov & Caeli A. Higney
- 681-684 How should we interpret the evidence about head start?
by Janet Currie
- 685-686 Surprising agreement on head start: Compli|ementing Currie and Besharov
by W. Steven Barnett
- 686-688 Response to Barnett and Currie
by J. Besharov & Caeli A. Higney
- 688-689 Response to Besharov|Higney and Barnett
by Janet Currie
- 691-693 An Academic Odyssey: Natural Science to Social Sciences & Policy Analysis , by Duncan MacRae Jr., Xlibris Publishers (www.Xlibris.com), 2005, 284 pp., $28.79 hardcover
by Dale Whittington
- 694-700 Learning More from Social Experiments: Evolving Analytic Approaches , edited by Howard S. Bloom, New York: Russell Sage, 2005, 246 pp., $35 hardcover, $19.95 paperback
by Gary Burtless
2007, Volume 26, Issue 2
2007, Volume 26, Issue 1
- 7-30 Disentangling the racial test score gap: Probing the evidence in a large urban school district
by Leanna Stiefel & Amy Ellen Schwartz & Ingrid Gould Ellen
- 31-56 School choice, racial segregation, and test-score gaps: Evidence from North Carolina's charter school program*
by Robert Bifulco & Helen F. Ladd
- 57-77 Employment, privatization, and managerial choice: Does contracting out reduce public sector employment?
by Sergio Fernandez & Craig R. Smith & Jeffrey B. Wenger
- 79-98 The impact of child support enforcement policy on nonmarital childbearing
by Robert D. Plotnick & Irwin Garfinkel & Sara S. McLanahan & Inhoe Ku
- 99-123 Decentralized governance and environmental change: Local institutional moderation of deforestation in Bolivia
by Krister Andersson & Clark C. Gibson
- 125-148 Earned income credit utilization by welfare recipients: A case study of Minnesota's earned income credit program
by Donald P. Hirasuna & Thomas F. Stinson
- 149-175 The effects of state policy design features on take-up and crowd-out rates for the state children's health insurance program
by Cynthia Bansak & Steven Raphael
- 177-177 Expanding health care coverage: National versus state leadership
by Richard P. Nathan
- 178-181 The worst system of health care reform-except for all the others: A Federalist approach to health care reform
by Henry J. Aaron
- 181-184 The right to medical care is national
by Paul H. O'Neill
- 184-186 Response
by Henry J. Aaron
- 187-187 Response
by Paul H. O'Neill
- 189-199 Increasing the transparency of stated choice studies for policy analysis: Designing experiments to produce raw response graphs
by Dipika Sur & Joseph Cook & Susmita Chatterjee & Jacqueline Deen & Dale Whittington
- 201-204 The Oxford handbook of public management
by Fred Thompson
- 204-207 Players in the public policy process: Nonprofits as social capital and agents
by Eva Witesman
- 208-214 Reconnecting disadvantaged young men
by Samuel L. Myers, Jr.
- 215-215 Holzer, Harry J., and Neumark, David (2006). Affirmative action: What do we know? The Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 26(2), 463-490
by Harry J. Holzer & David Neumark
2006, Volume 25, Issue 4
- 783-802 Does sex education affect adolescent sexual behaviors and health?
by Joseph J. Sabia
- 803-825 Does early adolescent sex cause depressive symptoms?
by Joseph J. Sabia
- 827-854 Job sprawl, spatial mismatch, and black employment disadvantage
by Michael A. Stoll
- 855-874 Curbside recycling: Waste resource or waste of resources?
by David Aadland & Arthur J. Caplan
- 875-895 Downsizing, competition, and organizational change in government: Is necessity the mother of invention?
by Steven Kelman
- 897-919 A re-examination of welfare states and inequality in rich nations: How in-kind transfers and indirect taxes change the story
by Irwin Garfinkel & Lee Rainwater & Timothy M. Smeeding
- 921-942 State-level predictors of food insecurity among households with children
by Judi Bartfeld & Rachel Dunifon
- 943-990 Child support enforcement: Programs and policies, impacts and questions
by Maureen A. Pirog & Kathleen M. Ziol-Guest
- 991-992 Can we say no: The challenge of rationing health care, by Henry J. Aaron and William B. Schwartz, with Melissa Cox
by Jan Blustein
- 993-995 Managing welfare reform in New York City, edited by E. S. Savas
by Andrew R. Feldman
- 995-999 Illicit: How smugglers, traffickers, and copycats are hijacking the global economy, by Moisés Naím
by Samuel Nunn
- 999-1001 Digital government technology and public sector performance, by Darrell M. West
by Craig L. Johnson
2006, Volume 25, Issue 3