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Home >> The School and Its Faculty >> Tina Nabatchi About the Professor
Phone: (315) 443-8994 400 Eggers Hall The Maxwell School of Syracuse University Syracuse, NY 13244
B.A., Political Science, The American University
Tina Nabatchi is an
Assistant Professor of Public Administration and International Affairs
and a
Faculty Research Associate at the Program for the Advancement of
Research on Conflict and Collaboration (PARCC). Her research focuses on
citizen participation, collaborative governance, conflict resolution,
and challenges in public administration. Though her scholarship is
varied, the unifying theme is
one of democratic governance in public administration.
Her research has been published in numerous journals, such as
Public Administration Review,
Journal of Public Administration
Research and Theory, National
Civic Review, Conflict
Resolution Quarterly, and the
International Journal of Conflict Management, among others, as well
is in several edited books. Her article, “Addressing
the Citizenship and Democratic Deficits: Exploring the Potential of
Deliberative Democracy for Public Administration” won the 2010 Best
Article Award from The
American Review of Public Administration. She also has a forthcoming
edited volume, Democracy in
Motion: Evaluating the Practice and Impact of
Deliberative Civic Engagement (Oxford
University Press, 2012).
Click here for Dr. Nabatchi's CV.
Dr. Nabatchi is also
Co-Director of
CNYSpeaks, a joint project of the Maxwell School and the
Post-Standard that seeks to engage the citizens of the Central New York
region in discussions about the issues that matter to them most.
Before joining the Maxwell
School, Dr. Nabatchi was the Research Coordinator for the Indiana
Conflict Resolution Institute at Indiana University-Bloomington, where
she was responsible for the design, implementation, analysis, and
publication of various research projects. In this capacity, she provided
consultations about, and evaluations of, alternative dispute resolution
(ADR) in several U.S. federal agencies, including the Department of
Justice, the Postal Service, the National Institutes of Health, the
Department of Agriculture, and the U.S. Institute for Environmental
Conflict Resolution.
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