The American Review of Public Administration
Public Policy & Public Administration
Topics include the following:
- program evaluation & policy analysis,
- local government management,
- intergovernmental relations,
- citizen participation/deliberative democracy,
- information technology and e-government,
- crime and criminal justice,
- budgeting,
- human resources,
- public policy,
- new public management,
- organizational theory and behavior,
- public administration theory, and
- public service ethics.
The American Review of Public Administration is an elite scholarly journals in public administration and public affairs. ARPA’s identity lies at the core of the field of public administration, and its quality and reputation have grown in tandem as the journal marked its fiftieth year in 2020. ARPA focuses substantively on public administration broadly defined, publishing scholarship on all aspects of the field, including such traditional areas as organization and management studies, program and performance evaluation, and budgeting and financial management, as well as such emerging areas as network governance, public involvement and public service motivation.
Although rooted in U.S. public administration, ARPA also increasingly carries research from international and comparative settings authored by international scholars. The journal has no disciplinary or methodological bias, other than an insistence on analytical excellence and substantive relevance. Toward that end, all manuscripts are subjected to a blind peer-review process prior to acceptance and publication, most within two months’ time. Even the occasional invited essays from leading scholars are subject to independent reviews by the co-editors.
The American Review of Public Administration is one of the elite scholarly journals in public administration and public affairs. ARPA focuses on public administration broadly defined, publishing scholarship on all aspects of the field, including such areas as organization and management studies, program and performance evaluation, and budgeting and financial management, network governance, public involvement and public service motivation. Although rooted in U.S. public administration, ARPA also carries research from international and comparative settings. The journal has no disciplinary or methodological bias. All manuscripts are subjected to a blind peer-review process prior to acceptance and publication, most within two months’ time.
Stephanie P. Newbold | Rutgers University, USA |
Marc Holzer | Suffolk University, USA |
Guy B. Adams | University of Missouri, USA |
John Clayton Thomas | Georgia State University - Atlanta, Georgia |
Cleopatra Charles | Rutgers University–Newark, USA |
Michael J. Ahn | University of Massachusetts-Boston, USA |
Jennifer Alexander | University of Texas at San Antonio University, USA |
Seung-Ho An | University of Arizona, USA |
David Arellano Gault | CIDE, Mexico |
J. Edwin Benton | University of South Florida, USA |
Frances Stokes Berry | Florida State University, USA |
Bob Blankenberger | University of Illinois at Springfield, USA |
Candice Bodkin | Georgia Southern University, USA |
Brenda Bond | Suffolk University, USA |
Eric Boyer | University of Texas at El Paso, USA |
Lori Brainard | George Washington University, USA |
Jeffrey L. Brudney | University of North Carolina, Wilmington, USA |
Thomas Bryer | University of Central Florida, USA |
Hon S. Chan | City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China |
Tom Christensen | University of Oslo, Norway and Stanford University, USA |
Benjamin Y. Clark | University of Oregon, USA |
Louise Comfort | University of Pittsburg, USA |
Thaddeus Conner | New Mexico State University, USA |
Raymond Cox | University of Akron, USA |
Dennis Daley | North Carolina State University, USA |
Randall S. Davis | Southern Illinois University-Carbondale, USA |
Leisha DeHart-Davis | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA |
Ruth H. DeHoog | University of North Carolina, Greensboro, USA |
Mary Feeney | Arizona State University, USA |
Michael Ford | University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, USA |
Heather Gretha-Taylor | University of Kansas, USA |
Mary Ellen Guy | University of Colorado at Denver, USA |
Lauren Hamilton | University of Maryland Baltimore County, USA |
Carolyn J. Heinrich | Vanderbilt University, USA |
Rebecca Hendrick | University of Illinois at Chicago, USA |
W. Bartley Hildreth | Georgia State University, USA |
Alfred Tat-Kei Ho | University of Kansas, USA |
So Hee Jeon | Seoul National University, Korea |
Naim Kapucu | University of Central Florida, USA |
Stuart Kasdin | City of Goleta, CA, USA |
Taehee Kim | Seoul National University of Science and Technology, South Korea |
Kristina M. Lambright | State University of New York- Binghamton, USA |
Gregory B. Lewis | Georgia State University, USA |
Avery Livingston | U.S. Department of Justice, USA |
Julianne Mahler | George Mason University, USA |
Peter Mameli | John Jay College, USA |
Brian McLaughlin | Villanova University, USA |
Kenneth J. Meier | American University, USA |
George Mitchell | Baruch College, USA |
Angel Molina | Arizona State University, USA |
John Nalbandian | University of Kansas, USA |
Kimberly L. Nelson | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA |
Kathryn E. Newcomer | George Washington University, USA |
Patrick Overeem | Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Jaclyn Piatak | University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA |
Jos C. N. Raadschelders | The Ohio State University, USA |
Hal G. Rainey | University of Georgia, USA |
Beth Rauhaus | Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, USA |
B. J. Reed | University of Nebraska, Omaha, USA |
Patrick Roberts | Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA |
John C. Ronquillo | University of Colorado-Denver, USA |
David H. Rosenbloom | American University, USA |
Meghna Sabharwal | University of Texas at Dallas, USA |
Jodi R. Sandfort | University of Minnesota, USA |
Amy Smith | University of Massachusetts at Boston, USA |
Edmund C. Stazyk | University at Albany SUNY, USA |
Jessica N. Terman | George Mason University, USA |
Craig R. Thomas | University of Washington, USA |
Steven Van de Walle | Public Governance Institute, KU Leuven, Belgium |
Curtis Ventriss | University of Vermont, USA |
Eran Vigoda-Gadot | University of Haifa, Israel |
Jonathan West | University of Miami, USA |
Aimee Williamson | Suffolk University, USA |
Anne Williamson | University of Missouri-Kansas City, USA |
Bradley E. Wright | Georgia State University, USA |
Yahong Zhang | Rutgers University - Newark, USA |
Zhiwei Zhang | Kansas State University, USA |
Robert Zinke | Eastern Washington University, USA |
Sandy Zook | University of Colorado at Denver, USA |
Jonathan Wexler | Rutgers University - Newark, USA |
Manuscripts should be submitted electronically to http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/arpa where authors will be required to set up an online account on the SageTrack system powered by ScholarOne. Submission of a manuscript implies a commitment by the author to publish in the journal, if the manuscript is accepted, and the editors assume that any manuscript submitted to ARPA is not currently under consideration by any other journal. Manuscripts between 20 and 30 pages are especially welcome. Manuscripts are subjected to anonymize peer review and require the author's name(s) and affiliation listed on a separate page. Any other identification, including any references in the manuscript, the notes, the title, and reference sections should be removed from the paper and listed on separate pages.
Manuscript Preparation
Manuscripts should be prepared using the APA Style Guide (Sixth Edition). All pages must be typed, double-spaced (including references, footnotes, and endnotes). Text must be in 12-point Times Roman. Block quotes may be single-spaced. Must include margins of 1 inch on all the four sides and number all pages sequentially.
The manuscript should include four major sections (in this order): Title Page, Abstract, Main Body, and References.
Sections in a manuscript may include the following (in this order): (1) Title page, (2) Abstract, (3) Keywords, (4) Text, (5) Notes, (6) References, (7) Tables, (8) Figures, (9) Appendices, and (10) Author Biography
1. Title page. Please include the following:
- Full article title
- Acknowledgments and credits
- Each author’s complete name and institutional affiliation(s)
- Grant numbers and/or funding information
- Corresponding author (name, address, phone/fax, e-mail)
2. Abstract. Print the abstract (150 to 250 words) on a separate page headed by the full article title. Omit author(s)’s names.
3. Text. Begin article text on a new page headed by the full article title.
a. Headings and subheadings. Subheadings should indicate the organization of the content of the manuscript. Generally, three heading levels are sufficient to organize text. Level 1 heading should be Centered, Boldface, Upper & Lowercase, Level 2 heading should be Flush Left, Boldface, Upper & Lowercase, Level 3 heading should be Indented, boldface, lowercase paragraph heading that ends with a period, Level 4 heading should be Indented, boldface, italicized, lowercase paragraph heading that ends with a period, and Level 5 heading should be Indented, italicized, lowercase paragraph heading that ends with a period.
b. Citations. For each text citation there must be a corresponding citation in the reference list and for each reference list citation there must be a corresponding text citation. Each corresponding citation must have identical spelling and year. Each text citation must include at least two pieces of information, author(s) and year of publication. Following are some examples of text citations:
(i) Unknown Author: To cite works that do not have an author, cite the source by its title in the signal phrase or use the first word or two in the parentheses. Eg. The findings are based on the study was done of students learning to format research papers ("Using XXX," 2001)
(ii) Authors with the Same Last Name: use first initials with the last names to prevent confusion. Eg. (L. Hughes, 2001; P. Hughes, 1998)
(iii) Two or More Works by the Same Author in the Same Year: For two sources by the same author in the same year, use lower-case letters (a, b, c) with the year to order the entries in the reference list. The lower-case letters should follow the year in the in-text citation. Eg. Research by Freud (1981a) illustrated that…
(iv) Personal Communication: For letters, e-mails, interviews, and other person-to-person communication, citation should include the communicator's name, the fact that it was personal communication, and the date of the communication. Do not include personal communication in the reference list. Eg. (E. Clark, personal communication, January 4, 2009).
(v) Unknown Author and Unknown Date: For citations with no author or date, use the title in the signal phrase or the first word or two of the title in the parentheses and use the abbreviation "n.d." (for "no date"). Eg. The study conducted by of students and research division discovered that students succeeded with tutoring ("Tutoring and APA," n.d.).
5. Notes. If explanatory notes are required for your manuscript, insert a number formatted in superscript following almost any punctuation mark. Footnote numbers should not follow dashes ( — ), and if they appear in a sentence in parentheses, the footnote number should be inserted within the parentheses. The Footnotes should be added at the bottom of the page after the references. The word “Footnotes” should be centered at the top of the page.
6. References. Basic rules for the reference list:-
- The reference list should be arranged in alphabetical order according to the authors’ last names.
- If there is more than one work by the same author, order them according to their publication date – oldest to newest (therefore a 2008 publication would appear before a 2009 publication).
- When listing multiple authors of a source use “&” instead of “and”.
- Capitalize only the first word of the title and of the subtitle, if there are one, and any proper names – i. e. only those words that are normally capitalized.
- Italicize the title of the book, the title of the journal/serial and the title of the web document.
- Manuscripts submitted to The American Review of Public Administration (ARPA) should strictly follow the APA manual (6th edition).
- Every citation in text must have the detailed reference in the Reference section.
- Every reference listed in the Reference section must be cited in text.
- Do not use “et al.” in the Reference list at the end; names of all authors of a publication should be listed there.
Here are a few examples of commonly found references. For more examples please check APA(6th Ed).
- Books:
Book with place of publication-- Airey, D. (2010). Logo design love: A guide to creating iconic brand identities. Berkeley, CA: New Riders.
Book with editors & edition-- Collins, C., & Jackson, S. (Eds.). (2007). Sport in Aotearoa/New Zealand society (2nd ed.). South Melbourne, Australia: Thomson.
Book with author & publisher are the same-- MidCentral District Health Board. (2008). District annual plan 2008/09. Palmerston North, New Zealand: Author.
Chapter in an edited book-- Dear, J., & Underwood, M. (2007). What is the role of exercise in the prevention of back pain? In D. MacAuley & T. Best (Eds.), Evidence-based sports medicine (2nd ed., pp. 257-280). Malden, MA: Blackwell.
- Periodicals:
Journal article with more than one author (print)-- Gabbett, T., Jenkins, D., & Abernethy, B. (2010). Physical collisions and injury during professional rugby league skills training. Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport, 13(6), 578-583.
Journal article – 8 or more authors-- Crooks, C., Ameratunga, R., Brewerton, M., Torok, M., Buetow, S., Brothers, S., … Jorgensen, P. (2010). Adverse reactions to food in New Zealand children aged 0-5 years. New Zealand Medical Journal, 123(1327). Retrieved from http://www.nzma.org.nz/journal/123-1327/4469/
- Internet Sources:
Internet – no author, no date-- Pet therapy. (n.d.). Retrieved from htttp://www.holisticonline.com/stress/stress_pet-therapy.htm
Internet – Organisation / Corporate author-- SPCA New Zealand. (2011). Your dog may be dying from the heat [Press release]. Retrieved from
http://www.rnzspca.org.nz/news/press-releases/360-your-dog-may-be-dying-...
- Examples of various types of information sources:
Act (statute / legislation)-- Copyright Act 1994. (2011, October 7). Retrieved from http://www.legislation.govt.nz
Blog post-- Liz and Ellory. (2011, January 19). The day of dread(s) [Blog post]. Retrieved from
http://www.travelblog.org/Oceania/Australia/Victoria/Melbourne/St-Kilda/...
Brochure / pamphlet (no author)-- Ageing well: How to be the best you can be [Brochure]. (2009). Wellington, New Zealand: Ministry of Health.
Conference Paper-- Williams, J., & Seary, K. (2010). Bridging the divide: Scaffolding the learning experiences of the mature age student. In J. Terrell (Ed.), Making the links: Learning, teaching and high quality student outcomes. Proceedings of the 9th Conference of the New Zealand Association of Bridging Educators (pp. 104-116). Wellington, New Zealand.
DVD / Video / Motion Picture (including Clickview & Youtube)-- Gardiner, A., Curtis, C., & Michael, E. (Producers), & Waititi, T. (Director). (2010). Boy: Welcome to my interesting world [DVD]. New Zealand: Transmission.
Magazine-- Ng, A. (2011, October-December). Brush with history. Habitus, 13, 83-87.
Newspaper article (no author)-- Little blue penguins homeward bound. (2011, November 23). Manawatu Standard, p. 5
Podcast (audio or video)-- Rozaieski, B. (2011). Logan cabinet shoppe: Episode 37: Entertainment center molding [Video podcast]. Retrieved from http://blip.tv/xxx
Software (including apps-- UBM Medica. (2010). iMIMS (Version1.2.0) [Mobile application software]. Retrieved from http://itunes.apple.com
Television programme-- Flanagan, A., & Philipson, A. (Series producers & directors). (2011). 24 hours in A & E [Television series]. Belfast, Ireland: Channel 4.
Thesis (print)-- Smith, T. L. (2008). Change, choice and difference: The case of RN to BN degree programmes for registered nurses (Master’s thesis). Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Thesis (online)-- Mann, D. L. (2010). Vision and expertise for interceptive actions in sport (Doctoral dissertation, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia). Retrieved fromhttp://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/44704
IMPORTANT NOTE: To encourage a faster production process of your article, you are requested to closely adhere to the points above for references. Otherwise, it will entail a long process of solving copyeditor’s queries and may directly affect the publication time of your article. In case of any question, please contact the journal editor at Adams@missouri.edu
7. Tables. They should be structured properly. Each table must have a clear and concise title. When appropriate, use the title to explain an abbreviation parenthetically. Eg. Comparison of Median Income of Adopted Children (AC) v. Foster Children (FC). Headings should be clear and brief.
8. Figures. They should be numbered consecutively in the order in which they appear in the text and must include figure captions. Figures will appear in the published article in the order in which they are numbered initially. The figure resolution should be 300dpi at the time of submission.
IMPORTANT: PERMISSION- The author(s) are responsible for securing permission to reproduce all copyrighted figures or materials before they are published in (ARPA). A copy of the written permission must be included with the manuscript submission.
9. Appendices. They should be lettered to distinguish from numbered tables and figures. Include a descriptive title for each appendix (e.g., “Appendix A. Variable Names and Definitions”). Cross-check text for accuracy against appendices.
10. Author Biography. Biographical statements for each author of not more than 50 words.