Zachary S. Huitink and David M Van Slyke

Zachary S. Huitink is a fourth-year PhD student in the Department of Public Administration and International Affairs at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. He is a research associate at the Maxwell School’s Campbell Public Affairs Institute, as well as at Syracuse University’s Institute for Veterans and Military Families (IVMF), a research and service organization focused on veterans’ and military family members’ socioeconomic, educational, health, and employment issues.

Thomas H. Davenport

Thomas H. Davenport holds the President’s Chair in Information Technology and Management at Babson College. At Babson he also leads the Process Management and Working Knowledge Research Centers. Professor Davenport is a widely published author and acclaimed speaker and consultant on the topics of business analytics, process management, information and knowledge management, reengineering, enterprise systems, and electronic business and markets. He has taught at the Harvard Business School, the University of Chicago, Dartmouth’s Tuck School of Business, and the University of Texas at Austin.

Nicole Darnall

Nicole Darnall is Associate Professor in the School of Public Affairs & the School of Sustainability at Arizona State University. She is also Doctoral Director for the School of Public Affairs. Her research investigates non-regulatory governance, public policy, and sustainable enterprise.

Norma M. Riccucci

Norma M. Riccucci (M.P.A. University of Southern California, Ph.D. Maxwell School, Syracuse University) is Distinguished Professor of Public Administration at the School of Public Affairs and Administration, Rutgers University, Campus at Newark.  Professor Riccucci has published extensively in the areas of public management, affirmative action, human resources and public sector labor relations. Some of her publications include Public Administration: Traditions of Inquiry and Philosophies of Knowledge and How Management Matters: Street Level Bureaucrats and Welfare

Steve Redburn

Steve Redburn, Professorial Lecturer, The Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration, George Washington University. International consultant on budget process, author, and lecturer with 3 decades of government experience. Formerly Study Director, National Academy of Sciences; Project Director, National Academy of Public Administration; Senior career executive, U.S. Office of Management and Budget; Adjunct Professor, Heinz College, Carnegie Mellon University, Adelaide, Australia.

Priscilla Regan

Dr. Regan is a Professor in the Department of Public and International Affairs at George Mason University. Prior to joining that faculty in 1989, she was a Senior Analyst in the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment (1984-1989) and an Assistant Professor of Politics and Government at the University of Puget Sound (1979-1984).

Robert A. F. Reisner

Robert A. F. Reisner is the President of Transformation Strategy Inc., a boutique strategy consulting firm that works with global firms and specialists in multiple disciplines to fashion creative solutions for clients in the public and private sectors. He is the author of “When a Turnaround Stalls” in the Harvard Business Review (February 2002) and numerous technical papers on issues ranging from strategic planning to innovation to institutional transformation.

 

Seung-Yong Rho

Seung-Yong Rho

is a senior research associate for the National Center

Seung-Yong Rho

for Public Productivity and a doctoral candidate in the Graduate

Department of Public Administration, Rutgers University-Newark,

with concentrations in governance and public management. His

current research is on the effects of digital deliberative governance

Bryan Rice

Bryan has broad experience leading Forestry, Wildland Fire, and Tribal programs across DOI, BIA, and USDA. His federal government career has spanned nearly 20 years, beginning with service on the Helena Interagency Hotshot Crew for the USFS in Montana, and then as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Nepal working in both community forestry and rural development. Bryan has supervised numerous timber operations as a timber sale officer on the Yakama Reservation as well as a layout forester on the Tongass National Forest in Alaska.

James B. Rice, Jr.

James Rice, Jr. joined MIT in 1995 as the Director of the MIT Integrated Supply Chain Management (ISCM) Program, a collaborative research program with industry partners. As Director of the ISCM Program, he serves sponsoring companies by conducting research in supply chain management, facilitating collaboration among the sponsors at quarterly best practice sharing events, and funding supply chain research across MIT. Rice currently teaches the "Supply Chain Context" course in MIT's Master of Engineering in Logistics academic program.

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