The University of Massachusetts Amherst
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CPPA Announces Fall 2012 Faculty Colloquium Series

The fall 2012 CPPA Faculty Colloquium Series offers an exciting lineup of accomplished researchers who will speak on a diversity of topics that have significant policy implications. This semester’s speakers will talk about family care policies in the United States; global environmental policy initiatives; American housing policies and zoning regulations; and New Deal economic policies as they relate to the Connecticut River valley.

The talks are informal and often are about works-in-progress, with presenters providing a significant amount of time for audience discussion and feedback. All talks will be in Thompson 620, from noon to 1 p.m. They are open to the public and brown bag lunches are welcome.

Sept. 24: Joya Misra (sociology and public policy) Family Policies, Employment and Poverty among Partnered and Single Mothers Cross-Nationally (regarding research conducted with Stephanie Moller, Eiko Strader and Elizabeth Wemlinger)

Oct. 1: Gretchen Gano (public policy) Hearing and Heeding Citizen Voices in the Global Governance of Biodiversity

Nov. 5: Ellen Pader (regional planning) Household Definitions, Zoning and Discrimination: How Housing Policies can Prevent Us from Being our Sibling’s Keeper, Create Waste and Cause Hate

Dec. 3: Eve Vogel (geography) The New Deal vs. Yankee Independence: The Failure of Comprehensive Development on the Connecticut River and its Legacies for River Management

Categories
Alumni news Faculty Research Science, technology & society

Sept. 6 Event to Celebrate Publication of Book by Schweik and English

Please help us celebrate the publication of Internet Success: A Study of Open Source Software Commons, by Charles Schweik, associate professor of environmental conservation and public policy, and Robert English (MPPA ’08). The Center for Public Policy and Administration will host a book launch party for Schweik and English on Thursday, Sept. 6 from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Gordon Hall Atrium.

Internet Success is the result of the first large-scale empirical study examining the social, technical and institutional aspects of open source software. Schweik and English look at the factors that lead to some open source projects successfully producing usable software and sustaining ongoing product development, while other open source projects are abandoned. The book has received praise from the open source software community, including in this review.

This book launch is part of the CPPA student orientation week and will introduce new students to one aspect of intellectual life at CPPA. Faculty and students from other departments are also welcome.

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Faculty Research Science, technology & society

Fountain Leads World Economic Forum Session

During the recent World Economic Forum Summit in Istanbul, Professor Jane Fountain (political science and public policy) led heads of state and government, senior ministers, business leaders and academic experts in a working session about the future of government.

Participants in the session explored ways that governments can more effectively meet the increasing challenges of global and national macroeconomic inequalities and transnational political conflicts in an increasingly interconnected world. The summit’s theme, bridging regions in transformation, focused on jobs, youth education and employment, and ways to promote economic development throughout the region.

Fountain is the vice chair of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on the Future of Government, and led the session with Lord Peter Mandelson, the council’s 2012 chair. She headed the council last year and has been a member for four years.

During the trip, Fountain was interviewed on social media and digital government in Turkey and throughout the region. She also met with key government, media business and academic leaders, including Nursuna Memecan, one of only a few women members of parliament in Turkey and delegate to the Council of Europe. Among other issues, they spoke of the need for greater appreciation for diversity in European politics. Among the academics Fountain met was Professor Zuhre Aksoy of Istanbul’s Bogazici University. Aksoy is an expert on international environmental politics and received her doctorate in political science from UMass Amherst.

Fountain directs the National Center for Digital Government and the Science, Technology and Society Initiative, both of which are based at the Center for Public Policy and Administration. The National Center for Digital Government, a research center, regularly hosts international visiting fellows as part of its mission to build a global network of scholars focused on technology and government.

To watch an interview with Professor Fountain on the Turkish television station ATV, click here [in Turkish]. A copy of the Future of Government report is available through the World Economic Forum website, as is more information about the Global Agenda Council on the Future of Government.

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Faculty Research

Mednicoff Publishes Work on Middle East Policy

David Mednicoff, assistant professor of public policy, has two new publications.

The first publication, “The Legal Regulation of Migrant Workers, Politics and Identity in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates,” is now a book chapter in Migrant Labour in the Persian Gulf, edited by Mehran Kamrava and Zahra Babar and published by Columbia University Press (2012).  The chapter grew from research supported by a multi-year grant from the Center for International and Regional Studies at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service to study the effects of legal regulations on migrant workers in Doha and Dubai.

Mednicoff’s second recent publication, “The Rule of Law and Arab Political Liberalization: Three Models for Change,” appears in the Harvard Journal of Middle Eastern Politics and Policy (Vol. 1: 55-83).  In it, Mednicoff argues that there are multiple ways in which the rule of law can lead to more open politics in the Middle East and North Africa.

 

Categories
Faculty Research Social inequality & justice

Badgett Testifies in Favor of Federal Employment Non-Discrimination Act

Badgett with Democratic Sen. Merkley of Oregon.

CPPA Director M.V. Lee Badgett told the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee today that Congress should pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act because lesbian, gay and bisexual people are nearly as likely to file discrimination complaints as those already protected by federal anti-bias laws.

Badgett was one of five witnesses who provided the Senate committee with testimony related to the proposed bill, which would ban discrimination in hiring and other employment decisions based on sexual orientation and gender identity. During her testimony, Badgett cited multiple reports and statistics showing that “sexual orientation discrimination results in economic harm to LGBT [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender] people, reducing their earnings by thousands of dollars.”

She pointed to a 2008 study examining workplace discrimination complaints filed between 1999 and 2007 in the 20 states that prohibit employment discrimination based on sexual orientation. In the study, Badgett and her co-authors showed that 4.7 per 10,000 lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) people in those states filed workplace discrimination complaints, while 5.4 per 10,000 women and 6.5 per 10,000 people of color filed complaints.

“In other words, LGB people are about as likely to file discrimination complaints as are people in groups that are currently protected against discrimination under federal law,” Badgett said.

She also countered a common critique of nondiscrimination legislation by arguing that policies prohibiting workplace bias can actually benefit the company. When employees feel more comfortable and valued at work, Badgett said, they are more likely to be fully invested in their jobs, will generally have less anxiety and therefore will be more productive. In fact, 86 percent of the Fortune 500 companies have nondiscrimination policies that include sexual orientation.

In addition to Badgett’s roles at UMass, she serves as research director at the Williams Institute of Sexual Orientation Law and Public Policy at UCLA. She was an expert witness during California’s Proposition 8 trial, which examined the constitutionality of that state’s 2008 ballot initiative banning same-sex marriage.

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Alumni news Faculty Research Grants

CPPA Hosts Five College Faculty Development Workshop

Last week the Center for Public Policy and Administration hosted a three-day workshop kicking off a Five College project that will develop strategies for bridging liberal arts and professional education for students who want to pursue careers in social change.

Brenda Bushouse, UMass associate professor of political science and public policy, co-directed the workshop with Molly Mead, director of the Center for Community Engagement and contributing faculty in American Studies at Amherst College. The two-year project is supported by a grant to Five Colleges, Inc., from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Ten faculty members, including representatives from all five campuses and two of the three professional schools involved in the project, participated in the workshop. Participants discussed the commonalities and differences in liberal arts and professional education, and how their individual campuses or programs currently prepare students to make a difference in the world. A panel of student and alumni social change leaders spoke to workshop participants about what in their educational experiences had helped them to become effective advocates for change.

Participants concluded their work by identifying important issues involved in effectively bridging professional and liberal arts education on the five campuses and possible collaborative activities in the coming academic year, including faculty and student development workshops around teaching and learning for social change. These activities will be broadly available to members of the Five College community.

Faculty participants in the workshop included Riché Barnes (Afro-American studies, Smith College), Carleen Basler (American studies and sociology, Amherst College), Myrna Breitbart (geography and urban studies, Hampshire College), Megan Briggs-Lyster (social entrepreneurship, Hampshire College), Brent Durbin (government, Smith College), Elizabeth Markovits (politics, Mount Holyoke College), David Mednicoff (public policy, UMass Amherst), Thomas Moliterno (management, UMass Amherst), Becky Wai-Ling Packard (psychology and education, Mount Holyoke College), and Eleanor Townsley (sociology, Mount Holyoke College).

Student panelists included Jake Hawkesworth (Hampshire College ’12, UMass Amherst ’13), Vanessa Megaw (Mount Holyoke College ’04, UMass Amherst ’13), Marcie Muehlke (Brown University ’06, UMass Amherst ’12), and Destry Sibley (Amherst College ’09).

Categories
Faculty Research

CPPA Offers New Online Course on LGBT Public Policy Issues

This summer the Center for Public Policy and Administration (CPPA) will offer the first-ever online course for graduate credit about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) social science, public policy and law.

The course, “LGBT Social Science and Public Policy Issues,” is designed for those who want to learn about cutting-edge research and how it’s used in the policy world. It will be taught by CPPA Director M.V. Lee Badgett, an internationally recognized expert on the economics of same-sex marriage and other LGBT policy issues.

Badgett’s course will explore research from economics, psychology, political science, public health and sociology that relates to employment discrimination against LGBT people, LGBT parenting, the legal recognition of same-sex couples, and the process of social and policy change. She will also compare countries’ approaches to public policy and to collecting data on sexual orientation and gender identity. Research and policies studied will come from a variety of countries, including Canada, the Netherlands, France, Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom and the U.S.

This distance learning course through the University of Massachusetts Amherst is an exciting and creative option for students and career professionals alike who are interested in studying laws and regulations having to do with LGBT issues. In particular, the three-credit course could be a great fit for:

  • Public policy students who want a specialized course in LGBT policy.
  • Advocates and activists who want access to the latest research and knowledge about how to use it.
  • Social science scholars and graduate students who want to see how research can affect public policy.
  • Lawyers and law students who want to understand the basics of social science research in this field.
  • Advanced undergraduates with backgrounds in the social sciences who are thinking about graduate studies related to law or public policy.

In addition to directing CPPA, Badgett is a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and is the research director of the Williams Institute for Sexual Orientation Law and Public Policy at UCLA. Her most recent book, When Gay People Get Married: What Happens When Societies Legalize Same-Sex Marriage, focuses on the U.S. and European experiences with marriage equality for same-sex couples. Badgett has testified on her work before Congress and many state legislatures, and she was an expert witness in California’s Prop 8 trial.

More information about the course is available here. Enroll today.

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Faculty Honors & Awards Faculty Research Governance Science, technology & society

Fountain named to Governor’s Council for Innovation

Jane Fountain, professor of political science and public policy, is one of 11 Massachusetts-based experts on technology and government who has been appointed to Gov. Deval Patrick’s newly formed Council for Innovation. The council will advise the governor on the best opportunities to improve government efficiency and use technology to streamline delivery of services to people, businesses and local governments.

Fountain is the founder and director of the National Center for Digital Government, based at the Center for Public Policy and Administration (CPPA) at UMass Amherst. The National Center was created with support from the National Science Foundation to develop research and infrastructure for the emerging field of information technology and governance. Fountain also heads the Science, Technology and Society Initiative at CPPA, which conducts multidisciplinary research on the intersection of science and technology with today’s social, political and economic issues.

Prior to this appointment by Gov. Patrick, much of Fountain’s work on e-governance has had an international focus. In recent years she has served as chair and vice chair of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on the Future of Government.

“This is much closer to home than most of my work,” Fountain said. “It is an honor to serve on this council and to represent our campus in doing so.”

In a news release this week, Gov. Patrick said the goal of the new council is to “support innovation across state government by engaging experts and entrepreneurs to help us make targeted investments in new technology. The Commonwealth’s Council for Innovation will help us find new opportunities to use cutting edge technology to improve service delivery and cut expenses.”

“Our Administration is committed to providing new tools and resources to improve the way government serves people,” said Lt. Gov. Timothy Murray. “The work of the council will be critical as we apply technology to improve everything we do in government including creating jobs, having safer neighborhoods, closing the achievement gap and containing health care costs.”

Proposed in the governor’s fiscal year 2013 budget recommendation, the council will enhance the administration’s ongoing efforts to improve services to residents, businesses and local governments by engaging with technology experts and entrepreneurs to focus on creating technology upgrades that will help streamline the delivery of services.

Joining Fountain on the council are venture capitalists, founders of successful start-ups, technology specialists, innovation experts and other academics. Council members will use their breadth of experience to help the Patrick administration set technology and innovation priorities, identify new opportunities for government to leverage technology to support innovative approaches to delivering government services and identify new partnerships for delivering programs and services to residents.

“The Patrick-Murray Administration has worked to reform the role information technology plays in government so we can invest in IT more wisely, and ensure our IT services are delivered more reliably and with better alignment to business priorities,” said the Commonwealth’s Chief Information Officer John Letchford. “I look forward to working with the governor and Innovation Council to drive technology-infused business strategies that will continue to enhance how we deliver government services to Commonwealth residents, businesses and local governments.”

The Patrick administration has a track record of technology-supported innovation across state government, including implementing a new call system at the Division of Unemployment Assistance that reduces the wait times and implementing “eLicensing” at the Department of Public Safety to allow companies and individuals to apply and pay for their licensing and renewals on-line. Additionally, the administration’s effort to consolidate IT services through Executive Order 532 has generated an estimated $14 million in savings for the Commonwealth since 2011.

In addition to establishing a Council for Innovation to support innovation efforts across state government, the executive order creates a Government Innovation Officer (GIO) position within the Executive Office for Administration and Finance to focus on improving internal government efficiencies and identifying technology savings and efficiencies. The executive order also establishes a statewide innovation competition to solicit proposals for innovative uses of technology that will enable the Commonwealth to better serve its residents and save money. Details on the competition are being developed and will be announced in the coming months.

The council members include:

  • Mohamad Ali (Arlington, MA), Chairman of the Mass Technology Leadership Council
  • Jeff Bussgang (Newton, MA), General partner at Flybridge Venture Capital and Entrepreneur in Residence at Harvard Business School’s Arthur Rock Center for Entrepreneurship
  • Marla Capozzi (Wellesley, MA), Senior innovation expert and co-leader of Global Innovation at McKinsey & Company
  • Art Dorfman (Sharon, MA), National vice president for SAP America
  • Jane Fountain (Sturbridge, MA), Professor of Political Science and Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Diane Hessan (Boston, MA), President and CEO CommuniSpace
  • Elaine Karmack (Brewster, MA), Professor at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University
  • Andrew McAfee (Cambridge, MA), Principal research scientist at MIT’s Center for Digital Business at the Sloan School of Management
  • Bill Oates (Brighton, MA), Chief information officer for the City of Boston
  • Jim O’Neill (Hingham, MA), Chief information officer at HubSpot
  • Phil Swisher (Boston, MA), Senior vice president for innovation at Brown Brothers Harriman
Categories
Events Faculty Research Springfield Initiative

Rose to Speak on Root Causes of Poverty in Springfield

On April 30, Fred Rose will discuss his recent work in a talk titled “Addressing the Causes of Concentrated Poverty: The Case of Springfield.”

Rose is a lecturer for the Center for Public Policy and Administration and directs its Springfield Initiative, which provides a bridge between university research and resources and city residents who are working to build a stronger community. Currently Rose is working closely with the Center for Popular Economics and the Springfield-based Partners for a Healthier Community on the Wellspring Initiative, a budding economic and community development project in Springfield. Before coming to CPPA, Rose was the staff director and lead organizer at the Pioneer Valley Project in Springfield.

This is the final lecture in the spring 2012 CPPA Faculty Colloquium series and will be in Thompson 620, from noon to 1 p.m. The talk is free, and brown bag lunches are welcome.

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Faculty Research Public Engagement Project

Schalet: American Boys Shifting Relationship to Romance and Sex

Amy Schalet writes an op-ed in the New York Times examining emerging trends in relationships and sex for teenage boys in the United States. Schalet is an assistant professor of sociology, a CPPA faculty associate and a founding member of the UMass Public Engagement Project. Her book Not Under My Roof: Parents, Teens and the Culture of Sex was published last November.

 

Caring, Romantic American Boys

(New York Times 4/6/12)

Why are boys behaving more “like girls” in terms of when they lose their virginity? In contrast to longstanding cultural tropes, there is reason to believe that teenage boys are becoming more careful and more romantic about their first sexual experiences.

For a long time, a familiar cultural lexicon has been in vogue: young women who admitted to voluntary sexual experience risked being labeled “sluts” while male peers who boasted of sexual conquests were celebrated as “studs.”

No wonder American teenage boys have long reported earlier and more sexual experience than have teenage girls. In 1988, many more boys than girls, ages 15 to 17, told researchers that they had had heterosexual intercourse.

But in the two decades since, the proportion of all American adolescents in their mid-teens claiming sexual experience has decreased, and for boys the decline has been especially steep, according to the National Survey of Family Growth by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Today, though more than half of unmarried 18- and 19-year-olds have had sexual intercourse, fewer than 30 percent of 15- to 17-year-old boys and girls have, down from 50 percent of boys and 37 percent of girls in 1988. And there are virtually no gender differences in the timing of sexual initiation.

What happened in those two decades?

Fear seems to have played a role. In interviewing 10th graders for my book on teenage sexuality in the United States and the Netherlands, I found that American boys often said sex could end their life as they knew it. After a condom broke, one worried: “I could be screwed for the rest of my life.” Another boy said he did not want to have sex yet for fear of becoming a father before his time.

Dutch boys did not express the same kind of fears; they assumed their girlfriends’ use of the pill would protect them against fatherhood. In the Netherlands, use of the pill is far more common, and pregnancy far less so, than among American teenagers.

The American boys I interviewed seemed more nervous about the consequences of sex than American girls. In fact, the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth found that more than one-third of teenage boys, but only one-quarter of teenage girls, cited wanting to avoid pregnancy or disease as the main reason they had not yet had sex. Fear about sex was intensified by the AIDS crisis and by sex education that portrayed sex outside of heterosexual marriage as risky. Combined with growing access to pornography via the Internet, those influences may have made having sex with another person seem less enticing.

Fear no doubt has also played a role in driving up condom use. Boys today are much more likely than their predecessors to use a condom the first time they have sex.

But fear is probably not the only reason for the gender convergence. While American locker-room and popular culture portray boys as mere vessels of raging hormones, research into their private experiences paints a different picture. In a large-scale survey and interviews, reported in the American Sociological Review in 2006, the sociologist Peggy Giordano and her colleagues found teenage boys to be just as emotionally invested in their romantic relationships as girls.

The Dutch boys I interviewed grew up in a culture that gives them permission to love; a national survey found that 90 percent of Dutch boys between 12 and 14 report having been in love. But the American boys I interviewed, having grown up in a culture that often assumes males are only out to get sex, were no less likely than Dutch boys to value relationships and love. In fact, they often used strong, almost hyper-romantic language to talk about love. The boy whose condom broke told me the most important thing to him was being in love with his girlfriend and “giving her everything I can.”

Such romanticism has largely flown under the radar of American popular culture. Yet, the most recent research by the family growth survey, conducted between 2006 and 2010, indicates that relationships matter to boys more often than we think. Four of 10 males between 15 and 19 who had not had sex said the main reason was that they hadn’t met the right person or that they were in a relationship but waiting for the right time; an additional 3 of 10 cited religion and morality.

Boys have long been under pressure to shed what the sociologist Laura Carpenter has called the “stigma of virginity.” But maybe more American boys are now waiting because they have gained cultural leeway to choose a first time that feels emotionally right. If so, their liberation from rigid masculinity norms should be seen as a victory for the very feminist movement that Rush Limbaugh recently decried.

When I surveyed the firestorm of objections that followed his use of the word “slut” to pillory a law school student who advocated medical coverage for birth control, men were among his most passionate detractors.

Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised. The image of male sexuality Mr. Limbaugh perpetuates is hardly something to be proud of. And it sells the hearts of men, as well as women, short.