The University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Events

David Kassel to Speak on Managing Public Sector Projects

David Kassel will talk about his new book, Managing Public Sector Projects: A Strategic Framework for Success in an Era of Downsized Government, on Monday, September 27, from 12-1 p.m., in Room 903 of the UMass Campus Center.  The talk is sponsored by the UMass Amherst Center for Public Policy and Administration.

Kassel is principal of Accountable Strategies Consulting, LLC, in Harvard, MA, and former Chief of the Management Division of the Massachusetts Office of the Inspector General.  He holds a Masters Degree in Public Administration from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

The stakes for public projects are high because of their lasting impact on communities and the economic health of our nation.  Yet projects ranging from the Big Dig in Boston to the reconstruction of Iraq often result in cost overruns, missed deadlines, and poor production outcomes.  Kassel examines the causes underlying these problems and uses case studies, many of which are Massachusetts-based, to present effective practices for managers at all levels of government.

Kassel’s book has been praised as “an important volume, not only for public sector project management, but for the much broader field of public management.”  The book is published by the American Society for Public Administration as part of its Public Administration and Public Policy series.

Brownbag lunches are welcome at the talk.

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Events

Jarice Hanson Opens Fall 2010 CPPA Faculty Colloquium

The Center for Public Policy and Administration (CPPA) will kick off its Fall 2010 Faculty Colloquium on Monday, September 20, with a talk by Professor of Communication Jarice Hanson. The presentation will take place from 12-1 p.m. in Thompson 620. CPPA’s Colloquia are held monthly each semester and enable members of the UMass community to discuss ongoing research projects that have significant policy implications.

Hanson’s presentation, “The Digitally Divided: The New Minority and Willful Retreat from the Information Society,” is co-sponsored by the National Center for Digital Government (NCDG), a CPPA affiliate.

Hanson’s talk will investigate the growing movement of people who have withdrawn from Internet and cell phone use and their reasons for opting out of the “information society.” Her research draws from interviews with the “unconnected” and examines reasons for their choices along three dimensions related to economic principles, social choices, and perceptions of happiness.

Professor Hanson is the author, co-author, editor or co-editor of 21 books, including 24/7: How Cell Phones and the Internet Change the Way We Live, Work and Play (2007). Along with her UMass position, Hanson holds the Verizon Chair in Telecommunications at Temple University and is also a CPPA faculty associate. In addition to her research on cell phone and Internet usage, she is conducting research on the social and behavioral aspects of the emerging field of nanotechnology and the impact of media coverage of the war in Iraq on the rhetorical dimensions of democratic practice. Hanson received an Outstanding Teaching Award from the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences in 2008-2009. She has been at UMass Amherst since 1985 and holds a doctorate from Northwestern University.

Three additional speakers will participate in CPPA’s Faculty Colloquium this fall: Kathryn McDermott, associate professor of education and public policy (October 4,); Jeffrey Thompson, assistant research professor at the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) (November 1); and Amy Schalet, assistant professor of sociology (December 7).

All talks in the CPPA Faculty Colloquium are free and open to the public. Brownbag lunches are welcome. For additional information, go to www.masspolicy.org or contact Kathy Colón (kcolon@pubpol.umass.edu).

Categories
Events Science, technology & society

STS/CPPA Workshop Explores Nanotechnology Policy

National and international policy experts will converge at the University of Massachusetts Amherst on Friday, September 24, 2010, for the third annual Nanotechnology and Society Workshop, “Nanotechnology & Society: Emerging Organizations, Oversight, and Public Policy Systems.” The workshop will be convened by the Science, Technology and Society (STS) Initiative, part of the Center for Public Policy and Administration at UMass, in collaboration with the Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing.

“After more than a decade of research on and commercialization of nanotechnology and nanoscience, policies governing emerging technologies remain in their infancy,” notes Jane Fountain, UMass professor of political science and public policy and STS director. “UMass Amherst is a long-time leader in nanotechnology research, and this day-long workshop brings together top voices in the field to discuss the regulation and oversight of nanoscience.”

Workshop participants will examine frameworks for policymaking amid high uncertainty, including the role of national, international, and non-governmental organizations and actors, and will discuss the challenges involved in balancing effective public governance, rapid innovation, and intensifying global competition.

The workshop will feature presentations from top leaders at US federal agencies including the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Consumer Product Safety Commission, and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH); the MA Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs; DuPont; Resources for the Future; and the Loka Institute, as well as some of the nation’s foremost academic researchers engaged in research on nanotechnology policy.

The workshop on September 24 will take place from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. in the Amherst Room, located on the 10th floor of the UMass Campus Center. It is open to the public, but advanced registration is required.  Visit www.umass.edu/sts/nanoworkshop for more information and to register. The workshop is funded by the National Science Foundation through the Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing.

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Events

“Politics of Open Source”

The Journal of Information Technology and Politics (JITP) held its 2nd annual thematic conference, the Politics of Open Source, at UMass Amherst May 6 and 7, 2010. The conference brought together an international group of experts examining the politics surrounding open source software (OSS) and the free/libre open source movement (FLOSS).

Day one featured a keynote lecture by Professor Eric von Hippel, Professor and Head of the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Group at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School, who spoke about user-created innovation. Day two featured a keynote lecture by Clay Johnson, Director of Sunlight Labs, who compared the open source movement to the obesity epidemic in the United States. The two very distinct approaches highlighted the vast diversity of research activity under the umbrella of open source politics.

Mark Cassell, Associate Professor of Political Science at Kent State University, and Daniel Kreiss, Ph.D. candidate in Stanford’s Department of Communication each won best paper awards for their research on “The Status of Free/Open Source Software among Local Governments: Lessons from Three German Cities” and “Open Source as Practice and Ideology: The 2003-2004 Howard Dean Campaign’s Organizational and Cultural Innovations in Electoral Politics,” respectively.  To read these winning papers, as well as those of all conference presenters, and to view presentation slides and videos, visit the conference website.

And, for another persepective on the conference, read Andy Oram’s comments on the O’Reilly Radar blog.

The conference was generously supported by Microsoft, Google, UMass Political Science, UMass Computer Science, Texifter, The National Center for Digital Government, the Qualitative Data Analysis Program, the Open Source Software Institute, and the Center for Public Policy and Administration. It was streamed live thanks to Panopto Inc.

JITP’s 3rd thematic conference JITP2011: the Future of Computational Social Science will be held May 16 & 17, 2011 at the University of Washington. A call for papers is out until January 1, 2011.

Categories
Events PAGC Student news

PAGC BBQ

All CPPA faculty, students and staff (and their families) are invited to the Annual PAGC End of the Year BBQ!

Where:  This year’s BBQ will be held at Look Park in Northampton.  We have reserved tables 14a, 15a, 15b and 15c.  We will put signs so that you don’t have too hard a time finding us! Parking at Look Park is $7.00 per vehicle, so we encourage you to carpool if possible.

When:  Saturday, May 1, 2010, from 1:00-5:00 PM.  If  the BBQ is cancelled due to weather, check your email! You will know 24 hours in advance.

PAGC will provide hamburgers, hot dogs and veggie burgers (and of course the plastic ware, plates and napkins).  We ask that you please bring a little something to share with the group.  Although we all really enjoy salads and chips, we would like to make sure we don’t end up with an abundance of salads and chips, and nothing to wash them down with!  As a result,  we would like you to please bring one of the following:

FIRST YEARS:
Appetizer and/or a side dish

SECOND YEARS:
Salad and/or dessert

FACULTY/STAFF
Beverage of some sort (Alcoholic or non) and/or dessert

We know how hectic the end of the year can be, so if you are unable to bring something from your assigned category, please feel free to bring something from a different category.  Something’s better than nothing!  Don’t forget to bring any lawn games that you may have lying around that would be fun to play, and blankets/chairs might be a good idea for sitting on!

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact any of the PAGC officers.  We look forward to seeing you and your family there!

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CPPA & university administration Events

End of the Year Activities

It is hard to believe that the semester is almost over and graduation is upon us! This year’s graduating class is poised for excellence, and CPPA wants to be sure to send them on their way in style. We hope you will take time to say goodbye to our graduates and celebrate their accomplishments at some of the events listed below:

May 12: CPPA Capstone Conference
Join CPPA as we learn about the research and client projects undertaken by our graduating students. This year’s capstone conference will take place May 12 from 9AM to 12:30 PM in Thompson 620 and 1:30 PM to 5PM in the Campus Center, room 905-909.  Check the bulletin boards on the 4th floor for final lists of presentation times.

May 13: CPPA Graduation Celebration
The Class of 2010 graduate reception will be held upstairs at The Blue Heron in Sunderland on Thursday, May 13th from 4-6 PM.  Join CPPA in our celebration of this year’s outstanding class. Reservations are required, so email Kathy today (kcolon at pubpol dot umass dot edu).

May 14: Commencement
Graduate Commencement will begin at 10AM. (Graduates should plan to check in at the Mullins Center much earlier). Visit the UMass Commencement website for details.

Best of luck to our graduates!

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Events

Rosalind Wright, M.D., M.P.H., to Speak on Psychological Stress and Asthma

Rosalind Wright, M.D., M.P.H., a professor of medicine and public health at Harvard University, will discuss “The Role of Psychological Stress in Asthma and Other Atopic Disorders” on Thursday, April 22 at 12:30 p.m. in Thompson 620.  This is the final talk in this year’s Mellon-funded CPPA Grants Workshop Speaker Series.

Wright is Associate Professor of Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and also a faculty member in the Department of Environmental Health at the Harvard School of Public Health. Professor Wright is known for work that incorporates environmental considerations into the treatment of disease, and helped to pioneer the concept that social factors can be significant contributors to such chronic conditions as childhood asthma.  She is co-investigator for the Asthma Coalition on Community, Environment, and Social Stress, a multi-method, longitudinal study based in Boston.

Professor Wright will focus in her talk on evidence linking psychological factors to childhood asthma, allergy risk, and lung function.  Wright’s research shows that beginning in utero, aberrant immune responses shaped by disruptions to the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis can contribute to lifelong problems with lung structure and function.  Both pre- and post-natal emotional stress—including stress produced by violence and chronic poverty—can disrupt HPA functioning and influence neuroendocrine, autonomic, and immune inflammatory processes that affect asthma and other atopic disorders.  In short, according to Wright, psychological stress disrupts the same biological pathways as pollutants from dense urban traffic or tobacco smoke. Wright’s findings have important implications for how physicians talk with and treat their patients, and also for public policies that address such problems as domestic violence and urban poverty.

While at UMass, Wright will also work with Assistant Professor of Resource Economics and Public Policy Sylvia Brandt, who is developing a grant proposal for external support of a transdisciplinary project on the social costs of childhood asthma.  Brandt is a Fellow in the 2009-2010 CPPA Grants Workshop, which is supported by the UMass Amherst Office of Faculty Development’s Mutual Mentoring Initiative, funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

This talk is free and open to the public.  Brownbag lunches are welcome.

For more information, contact Susan Newton, Associate Director for Research at CPPA (413-577-0478, snewton @pubpol .umass. edu)

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Events

Jane Fountain to Speak on the Virtual State

Jane Fountain, Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, will discuss “Deinstitutionalization and Reinstitutionalization in the Virtual State” on Monday, April 5, at 12 p.m. in Thompson 620.  Fountain is also the founder and director of the National Center for Digital Government and the director of the UMass Science, Technology and Society Initiative.

Professor Fountain’s talk, part of the Center for Public Policy and Administration’s Spring 2010 Faculty Colloquium, will address current claims that social networking and associated technologies and media have the power to transform government and civil society.  These claims emphasize the wisdom of crowds, the power of citizens to solve policy problems, and the extraordinary ability to coordinate and communicate using digital media.  However, these claims ignore or discount the role of power, politics, institutions and other core elements of governance.

Fountain is the author of the award-winning Building the Virtual State: Information Technology and Institutional Change, and her research on technology and governance has appeared widely in scholarly journals and edited collections focused on science, technology, and politics and public policy.  Fountain’s work has been supported by multiple grants from the National Science Foundation, and a generous gift from PriceWaterhouseCoopers enabled her to establish the Women in the Information Age Project during her tenure at Harvard University, where she served on the faculty of the Kennedy School of Government for 16 years before assuming her position at UMass Amherst.

Fountain is currently a member of the World Economic Forum Global Advisory Council on the Future of Government, as well as the American Bar Association blue ribbon commission on the future of e-Rulemaking.  She has served on several advisory bodies for organizations including the Social Science Research Council, the Internet Policy Institute, and the National Science Foundation.

Fountain holds a Ph.D. from Yale University in organizational behavior and political science, and has been a Radcliffe Fellow, a Yale Fellow, and a Mellon Fellow.

Professor Fountain’s talk is free and open to the public.  Brownbag lunches are welcome.

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Events

James Kwak to Speak on Politics and the Financial Crisis

James Kwak, a former management consultant at McKinsey and Company and a current law student at Yale University, will speak on “13 Bankers: The Political Background to the Financial Crisis” on Wednesday, April 21 at 12:00 p.m. in Thompson 620.  The talk is co-sponsored by the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) and the Center for Public Policy and Administration (CPPA).

Kwak’s presentation will be based on the just-released book, 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown, which he co-authored with Simon Johnson, the Ronald A. Kurtz (1954) Professor of Entrepreneurship at the MIT Sloan School of Management.

13 Bankers documents how a handful of banks became so large and powerful that, by the end of the 20th century, they were able to reshape our political landscape and produce a tolerance for excessive risk-taking that ultimately led to the current financial crisis and recession. The book also examines how both the Bush and Obama administrations bailed out the banks without securing meaningful reforms, setting the stage for another financial crisis, continued government bailouts, and an ever-growing national debt.

Ultimately, Johnson and Kwak show that the current crisis isn’t simply economic but a problem of political economy, and one that can be addressed only when policymakers find the courage to break up the big banks and impose stricter regulations. 

Niall Ferguson (Harvard University) notes that Johnson’s and Kwak’s “analysis of the unholy inter-twining of Washington and Wall Street—a cross between the gilded age and a banana republic—is essential reading,” and Bill Moyers calls 13 Bankers “a disturbing and painstakingly researched account of how the banks wrenched control of government and society out of our hands—and what we can do to seize it back.”

James Kwak received an A.B. in Social Studies from Harvard University and an M.A. and a Ph.D. in History from the University of California, Berkeley.  Both he and Simon Johnson, who previously was chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, have published articles in many leading publications, including The New York Times, The Atlantic, and The Economist.  They co-founded The Baseline Scenario, a widely-read blog about economics, finance and public policy.

This talk is free and open to the public.  Brownbag lunches are welcome.

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Events

Expert on Comparative Politics, Gad Barzilai, to Speak on Political Power and Legal Pluralism

Gad Barzilai, an international expert on comparative politics and law, will speak on “Beyond Relativism: Where is Political Power in Legal Pluralism?” on Friday, April 16 at 12:00 p.m. in Thompson 620.  The talk is part of the Center for Public Policy and Administration’s Mellon-funded Grants Workshop Speaker Series in collaboration with the Departments of Political Science and Legal Studies.

Barzilai is Professor of International Studies, Law & Political Science in the Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington.  Prior to 2005, he was a professor in the Department of Political Science at Tel Aviv University.  He is active in international, Israeli and Israeli-Palestinian human rights organization and has served as an advisor to politicians and NGOs on issues related to law and politics.  He is the author of the award-winning book, Communities and Law: Politics and Cultures of Legal Identities, and has helped to garner more than $4 million in support of academic projects under his direction.

Barzilai will focus in his talk on how theoretical constructs of legal pluralism—multiple legal practices in various jurisdictions—have challenged traditional notions of jurisprudence, but also on how research concerning legal pluralism can be enhanced through acknowledging the role of political power.  According to Barzilai, the politics of identities, non-ruling communities, and neo-liberal globalization are all sites of political power in the praxis of legal pluralism, and the dynamic interactions of local, national, and global agents generate forms of power that are often obscured behind the rhetoric of globalized pluralism. Barzilai will propose new constructs that can enable scholars to unveil political power in the context of decentralized legal pluralities.

While at UMass, Barzilai will also mentor Assistant Professor of Legal Studies and Public Policy David Mednicoff, who is developing a grant proposal for support of his research on the rule of law in contemporary Arab societies.  Mednicoff is a Fellow in the 2009-2010 CPPA Grants Workshop, which is supported by the UMass Amherst Office of Faculty Development’s Mutual Mentoring Initiative, funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

This talk is free and open to the public.  Brownbag lunches are welcome.