[GeoForAll-UrbanScience] Potentially important to us! Public Administration Review call for papers - relevant to our Urban Science efforts
sven schade
sven.schade at jrc.ec.europa.eu
Fri Aug 14 08:15:37 PDT 2015
Dear all,
Sounds great, but same situation here: happy to contribute but too busy to take the responsibility of driving the writing process.
I could contribute from the European perspective, with a glimpse into recent happenings on smart cities, citizen science etc. If considered appropriate also Big Data for urban environments, i.e. using new information sources (public sector information paired with private sources, such as social media platforms, mobile phone data and smart meters; and civic inputs, e.g. from low cost sensing).
Best,
Sven
On 08/14/15, Christopher Pettit <c.pettit at unsw.edu.au> wrote:
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> Charlie
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> Good find.
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> A number of high quality publications opportunities at the moment.
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> I am happy to contribute but don’t have bandwidth to lead something at the moment.
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> Chris
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> Chris Pettit
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> Professor of Urban Science
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> Associate Director, City Futures Research Centre
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> Built Environment, UNSW AUSTRALIA
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> UNSW SYDNEY NSW 2052 AUSTRALIA
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> T: +61 (2) 9385 4826
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> M: +61 422 301 832
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> E:
> c.pettit at unsw.edu.au
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> W:
> cityfutures.net.au
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> From: geoforall-urbanscience-bounces at lists.osgeo.org [mailto:geoforall-urbanscience-bounces at lists.osgeo.org]
> On Behalf Of Charles Schweik
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> Sent: Friday, 14 August 2015 12:14 AM
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> To: geoforall-urbanscience at lists.osgeo.org
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> Subject: [GeoForAll-UrbanScience] Potentially important to us! Public Administration Review call for papers - relevant to our Urban Science efforts
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> Hi GeoForAll Urban Thematic,
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> (Sending this through the Urban Science thematic listserv -- hopefully all who are on the wiki list are subscribed!)
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> See below. This looks very relevant to our Thematic in a high profile journal. I'm wondering if we want to collaboratively develop a paper on our Smart City vision ?
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> My fall will be VERY busy. But I could at least be a co-author and contribute the Commons-Based Peer Production idea and other content from the NSF RCN proposal. Anyone interested in taking the lead or interested in helping?
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> Charlie
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> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
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> From: Public Administration Review <par at indiana.edu <par at indiana.edu>>
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> Date: 12 August 2015 at 16:03
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> Subject: [ARNOVA-L] Call for Papers
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> To: "ARNOVA-L at iupui.edu <ARNOVA-L at iupui.edu>" <ARNOVA-L at iupui.edu <ARNOVA-L at iupui.edu>>
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> PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REVIEW
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> Call for Papers
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> Symposium: Interlocal Collaboration and Horizontal Regional Governance: An International Perspective
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> António Tavares (University of Minho, Portugal) and
> Bin Chen (Baruch College/CUNY & Tongji University), Guest Editors
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> Local governments
> around the world have increasingly encountered the public policy challenges spanning across multiple jurisdictions. They have dealt with problems of regional significance in a variety of ways. There is a long tradition of studying
> intergovernmental collaboration and regional governance in the North America. The number of scholarly contributions to this lively debate in the US and Canada contrasts with the paucity of theoretical attention and empirical investigation of self-organizing
> solutions for regional governance outside the North American context.
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> Consolidation or amalgamation of local governments as a top-down approach remains popular in many places. Yet many bottom-up and voluntary solutions to regional collective action dilemmas
> have emerged as viable alternatives, including networks, interlocal service agreements and public-private partnership arrangements. They are not well understood outside the U.S. context.
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> We seek a broad range of manuscripts that explore the use of horizontal, collaborative and voluntary solutions to collective action dilemmas across regions and metropolitan areas around
> the world. Informal networks, inter-local collaborative arrangements or associations of municipalities are examples of policy instruments designed to address problems of regional governance in many policy areas, including economic development, environmental
> sustainability, transportation and urban planning, land use management, etc.
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> Qualitative, quantitative and mixed-method studies with proven or potential capability to advance the state of research in the field of Public Administration will be considered for selection.
> Comparative articles are especially welcome.
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> Manuscripts are due no later than January 31, 2016 to the coordinating guest editors at
> atavares at eeg.uminho.pt and
> bin.chen at baruch.cuny.edu <bin.chen at baruch.cuny.edu>. After initial screening, authors of selected manuscripts will be invited to submit directly to PAR’s Editorial Manager for double blind review, with final decisions regarding
> publication being made by PAR’s editors. All authors should comply with PAR’s style guidelines.
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> =====
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> Complete instructions for managing your subscription to ARNOVA-L can be found from the "ARNOVA Listserve" link at
> http://www.arnova.org/?page=arnoval
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> ARNOVA-L can only be used by subscribers. To subscribe, follow the instructions mentioned above.
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> Please do not send administrative requests to the list address used for circulating messages to subscribers. Such messages have no effect (except that they are visible to every other subscriber to the list). Thank you.
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> ARNOVA website
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> http://www.arnova.org
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> --
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> Charlie Schweik
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> Professor, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
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> Dept of Environmental Conservation and Center for Public Policy and Administration
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> Personal website:
> http://people.umass.edu/cschweik(http://people.umass.edu/cschweik)
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> Publications: http://works.bepress.com/charles_schweik/
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> Author, Internet Success: A Study of Open Source Software (MIT Press, 2012) - see
> http://tinyurl.com/d3e4545
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> --------------------------------------------
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> Q: Why do I try my best to keep my emails to five sentences or less?
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> A: http://five.sentenc.es
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