Faculty Publications


“Toward a Theory of Fiscal Slack.” Journal Article

Author(s): Dr. Sungho Park

Abstract: Though the fiscal slack literature has advanced over the past decade, more research is needed for a systematic understanding of the determinants and uses of fiscal reserves at the local level. This paper reviews theory and empirical evidence on the determinants of municipal fiscal reserves offers a conceptual framework for analyzing fiscal reserves accumulation and tests a series of hypotheses using a panel of 2007–2012 financial data for 145 U.S. cities from 21 states. Generalized least squares models show […]

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“Evidence shows that more restrictions on municipal budgets could create unintended consequences.” Website

Author(s): Dr. Sungho Park

Featured Faculty: Dr. Sungho Park

Dr. Sungho Park was invited to write an article for the London School of Economics and Political Science’s USAPP blog. Based on his recent publication in State and Local Government Review, Dr. Park offered evidence that depending on their institutional configuration, state-imposed fiscal rules could generate unintended consequences at the municipal level.

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“Linking Risk Reduction and Community Resilience.” Journal Article

Author(s): Dr. Hyunjung Ji

Abstract: Risk reduction is a policy priority in governments at all levels. Building community resilience is one of the keys to reducing disaster risks. Resilience-focused risk reduction considers the wider social, political, and cultural environments of a community and emphasizes the importance of working with community members. This is in stark contrast to the previous vulnerability-focused risk management that treats disasters as unavoidable natural events and recognizes people as passive or helpless under the unavoidable disasters. Community resilience is a […]

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“How Do Different Types of Local Governments’ Sustainability Programs Relate to Their Environmental Outcomes.” Journal Article

Author(s): Dr. Hyunjung Ji

Abstract: Local governments worldwide have developed a suite of sustainability programs to improve environmental conditions within their jurisdictions. However, critics suggest that local governments’ sustainability programs are more symbolic than substantial in that they are often developed to create the appearance of addressing environmental issues rather than actual environmental performance outcomes. Despite the skeptics, as yet, we have little empirical understanding of the environmental impact of local sustainability programs. This paper bridges the gap by considering how the design of […]

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“The (D)Evolution of TIF Use: Redevelopment to Land Development in Nebraska.” Book Chapter

Author(s): Dr. Sungho Park

Abstract: While tax incremental financing (TIF) is one of the more commonly used economic development tools afforded to local governments, recent studies suggest: 1) a need to better appreciate the evaluation process and; 2) TIFs have evolved from strictly redevelopment projects to now include land development projects. To understand the extent to which TIF has evolved from its conception in the 1950s, this case study analyzes a recent TIF project in Fremont, NE, that has been approved to invite a […]

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“Military Insubordination in Popular Mass Uprisings.” Journal Article

Author(s): Dr. Holger Albrecht

Abstract: Holger Albrecht explores the effects of popular mass uprisings on civil-military relations in authoritarian regimes. Drawing on cases from the Arab Spring, he examines different types of military insubordination and the conditions catalyzing military coups, mutinies, officer defections, and mass desertions.

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“American Interventionism and the Geopolitical Roots of Yemen’s Catastrophe.” Journal Article

Author(s): Dr. Waleed Hazbun

Abstract The region’s current pattern of violence is rooted in the repeated US efforts to re-make the region to its advantage through the use of coercive force since 2001. Washington’s interventions and proliferating counterterrorism operations around the region—along with the new Arab wars that followed the Arab uprisings—have led regional middle powers to attempt to reshape that system to serve their own interests. The Saudi–Emirati war in Yemen is just the most tragic example of an Arab state suffering from […]

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“In America’s Wake: Turbulence and Insecurity in the Middle East” Journal Article

Author(s): Dr. Waleed Hazbun

Abstract Since the Arab Uprisings, Middle East geopolitics has transformed from a system organized around and against a US-managed security architecture into a multipolar system lacking norms, institutions, or balancing mechanisms to constrain conflict and the use of force. This shift is a product of repeated US efforts to order the region through coercive force but also shaped by the emerging multipolar system at the global level. With regional Middle East states lacking a shared understanding of threats, US post-9/11 […]

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“Affirmations for an Aging Electoral Order: The Mid-Term Elections of 2018.” Journal Article

Author(s): Dr. Regina Lea Wagner and Dr. Byron E. Shafer

Abstract At bottom, the election of 2018 produced one more iteration of an electoral order dominating American politics since 1992. So the main task of this paper is to elicit the structure of that order, drop the results of 2018 into it, and see how well those results fit. The key micro-analytic tools for approaching any election did work well in 2018, but cannot distinguish this election from other recent contests. The common journalistic focus on idiosyncratic elements of stability […]

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“Political Science Education.” Journal Article

Author(s): Margaret Purcell

Abstract This is a report of a case study of a course taught to upper-level, undergraduate students in a moderate sized, southern, public university. This review applies key tenets of established literature on the learning styles of Generation Z. An outline of the techniques suggested in the emerging published research on this cohort is paired with the techniques used and the results of the course design. The course is designed to introduce students in the political science discipline to the […]

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“Medicaid Expansion and the Political Fate of the Governors Who Support It.” Journal Article

Author(s): Richard Fording (University of Alabama) and Dana Patton (University of Alabama)

Abstract We provide evidence regarding potential policy feedback effects of healthcare reform by estimating the effect of Medicaid expansion on public support for the state actor most closely associated with responsibility for the expansion decision—the governor. The discretion granted to state governments concerning Medicaid expansion has created the potential for significant variation in mass feedback effects across the states. We are particularly interested in how these effects are influenced by the emerging racial polarization over healthcare policy, and how this […]

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“The Trump Presidency and the Structure of Modern American Politics.” Journal Article

Author(s): Regina Wagner and Byron E. Shafer

Abstract How much of politics is specific to its actors and how much is the reflection of an established structure is a perennial concern of political analysts, one that becomes especially intense with the candidacy and then the presidency of Donald Trump. In order to have a template for assigning the outcomes of politics to structure rather than idiosyncrasy, we begin with party balance, ideological polarization, substantive content, and a resulting process of policy-making drawn from the immediate postwar period. […]

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“Why Remittances are a Political Blessing and Not a Curse.” Journal Article

Author(s): Dr. David H. Bearce and Dr. Seungbin Park

  Abstract This paper reconsiders the proposition that remittances act as a political curse by reducing the poor’s demand for economic redistribution. With a newer democratization model focused on the demand for income protection from the rising groups in society, remittances may instead function as a political blessing. Since remittances increase income not only for the usually middle-class citizens that receive them, but also for the merchant and working classes per the multiplier effect, remittances should increase the demand for […]

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“Towards a Beirut School of critical security studies .” Journal Article

Author(s): Waleed Hazbun, et al.

Abstract This collectively written work offers a map of our ongoing efforts to work through critical approaches to the study of security and global politics with a focus on the Middle East and North Africa, engaging both experiences and voices of scholars from and working in the region. The unique contribution of the project, we suggest, is threefold. First, we reflect on our commitment to decolonial pedagogy, and how our collective experiences organising a Beirut-based summer school on critical security […]

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“Local Property Tax Limits in Nebraska: Within-State Variations in Effects.” Journal Article

Author(s): Sungho Park, Craig Maher, and Carol Ebdon

Abstract Tax and expenditure limitations (TELs) have been widely imposed on state and local governments. A substantial amount of research has been conducted on the effects of TELs, however, most have assumed that a TEL is equally binding on every local government in the state. This may not be the case; the degree to which a TEL constrains a jurisdiction is dependent on its position and context at the time of the TEL implementation, and, further, the responses of these […]

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“After First Principles: The Sociological Turn in International Relations as Disciplinary Crisis.” Book Chapter

Author(s): Daniel Levine (University of Alabama) and Alexander Barder (Florida International University)

Daniel Levine (University of Alabama) and Alexander Barder (Florida International University) The Sage Handbook of the History, Philosophy, and Sociology of International Relations (Sage, 2018), pp. 296-310  

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“The Effect of Revenue Diversification and Form of Government on Public Spending.” Journal Article

Author(s): Sungho Park (University of Alabama) and Ji Hyung Park (James Madison University)

Abstract Funding strategies, as budgetary choices, interacting with political structure, as institutions and structures, may determine the level of public spending as fiscal outputs. Revenue diversification interacting with form of government that has different management behaviors may produce a variation in the level of public spending. The purpose of this study is to understand how revenue diversification interacts with form of government in determining the level of public spending. A cross-sectional research design with the analysis of interaction effects was […]

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“Regional Powers and the Production of Insecurity in the Middle East.” Journal Article

Author(s): Waleed Hazbun, et al.

Abstract What impact have regional powers had on shaping regional order in the Middle East? What role will they play in the future of the regional system? Following the US-led invasion of Iraq and the failure of the USA to establish regional order, the area has witnessed a series of attempts by regional states to project power at the regional level and reshape the regional system around their own interests. This report surveys recent efforts by Iran, Qatar, Turkey, United […]

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“How to Keep Officers in the Barracks: Causes, Agents, and Types of Military Coups.” Journal Article

Author(s): Holger Albrecht (University of Alabama) and Ferdinand Eibl

Abstract What are the most efficient strategies to prevent military coups d’état? The answer depends on coup agency, that is, who attempts to overthrow the regime: elite officers or lower-ranking combat officers. Elite officers and lower-ranking combat officers have different incentives, opportunities, and capacities when it comes to perpetrating coups. Using original data on coup agency, public spending, and officer salaries in the Middle East and North Africa, we find that counterbalancing—a strategy designed to increase barriers for coup plotters’ […]

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“Going on the Run: What Drives Military Desertion in Civil War?” Journal Article

Author(s): Holger Albrecht (University of Alabama), Kevin Koehler

Abstract Under which circumstances do soldiers and officers desert in a violent domestic conflict? This article studies individual military insubordination in the Syrian civil war, drawing on interviews with deserters from the Syrian army now based in Turkey, Jordan, and Lebanon. A plausibility probe of existing explanations reveals that desertion opportunities originating in conflict events and the presence of safe-havens fail to explain individual deserters’ decision making. Accounting for socio-psychological factors—moral grievances and fear—generates more promising results for an inquiry […]

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