Policy Making and Southern Distinctiveness
4 authors - Hardback
£49.99
John C. Morris is a professor in the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. He previously served as a faculty member at Mississippi State University and Old Dominion University. He has studied southern politics and policy for more than 25years and has published widely in the fields of political science, public administration, and public policy. He is the coeditor of Speaking Green with a Southern Accent: Environmental Management and Innovation in the South (2010), and True Green: Executive Effectiveness in the US Environmental Protection Agency (2012). He is coeditor of Building the Local Economy: Cases in Economic Development (2008); coeditor of a three-volume series Prison Privatization: The Many Facets of a Controversial Industry (2012); and Advancing Collaboration Theory: Models, Typologies, and Evidence (Routledge, 2016). His most recent books include The Case for Grassroots Collaboration: Social Capital and Ecosystem Restoration at the Local Level (2013, with others); State Politics and the Affordable Care Act: Choices and Decisions (Routledge, 2019, with others); Organizational Motivation for Collaboration: Theory and Evidence (2019, with Luisa Diaz-Kope); Multiorganizational Arrangements for Watershed Protection: Working Better Together (Routledge, 2021, with Madeleine W. McNamara); and Clean Water Policy and State Choice: Promise and Performance in the Water Quality Act (forthcoming 2022). In addition, he has published more than 110 peer-reviewed articles, book chapters, and reports.
Martin K. Mayer is an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke (UNCP) in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration. In this position he teaches a variety of courses, primarily in the graduate school, in public management and health policy, and he leads the health administration concentration. He holds a PhD in public administration from Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, and additional degrees from the University of Akron. His previous work is centered primarily on decision-making and resource scarcity in the domains of health policy, local government, and transportation finance. He is the coauthor (with John C. Morris, Robert C. Kenter, and Luisa M. Lucero) of State Politics and the Affordable Care Act: Choices and Decisions (2019). His journal publications appear in Social Science Quarterly, Politics & Policy, The Social Science Journal, Public Works Management and Policy, State and Local Government Review and Politics and the Life Sciences, among others. He has contributed to several other book projects, reports, and committees on a variety of topics from sea-level rise to southern politics, public health, and environment policy.
Robert C. Kenter is the Director of Law Enforcement Field Engagement at the Center for Policing Equity, a non-profit action and research think tank. Prior to joining the Center for Policing Equity he served over 30 years with the Norfolk Police Department before retiring in April 2020. He holds a PhD in public administration from the School of Public Service at Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia. His research focuses on procedural justice, southern politics, and healthcare reform. His work has appeared in Social Science Quarterly, Policing: An International Journal, and Politics and Policy. He is also coauthor of State Politics and the Affordable Care Act: Choices and Decisions (Routledge, 2019).
R. Bruce Anderson is the Dr. Sarah D. and L. Kirk McKay, Jr. Endowed Chair in American History, Government, and Civics and Miller Distinguished Professor of Political Scienceat Florida Southern College in Lakeland, Florida, where he teaches the American core curriculum and is director of the Pre-Law program, and has developed multiple programs in civic education for both higher education and K-12 curriculum, including developing, authoring and editing the text "Exploring the Constitution," a nonpartisan/nonideological classroom text on constitutional mechanics. He holds a PhD in political science from Rice University. He is also a columnist for the Lakeland Ledger/USA Today Network and Political Consultant and on-air commentator for WLKF Radio of Hall Communications. He is a contributor, for the last three editions, to The New Politics of the Old South (edited by Charles Bullock III and Mark J. Rozell) and has published essays on many disparate subjects, including state legislative politics, the political life of Strom Thurmond and the Dixiecrats; the concept of justice in Immanuel Kant (with Sarah Massey); and KGB/GRU and CIA surveillance tradecraft and techniques. His work has also appeared in The American Review of Politics, The American Politics Quarterly, Social Science Quarterly, as well as more "mainstream" print media outlets.