Johnson, Thomas G., Daniel M. Otto, Steven C. Deller (eds.)
Community Policy Analysis Modeling. Ames, IA: Blackwell Publishing,
2006, 287 pp., $99.99.
Seasoned readers who follow developments in regional economics may
wonder if this volume is an updated version of a 1993 book edited by
Otto and Johnson. While the topic is similar, the two books are quite
different; the 2006 volume does not even cite the 1993 volume. The 1993
book was a loosely organized but still valuable collection of readings
focused on input--output and related models. The 2006 book appears to
have been carefully outlined by the editors and commissions issued to
the various contributing authors. The apparent attention to the
book's organization helped minimize many of the pitfalls associated
with a typical edited volume (overlap, gaps). The book should be
especially useful for practitioners, or for researchers who have a grasp
of the theory behind the models, but who need a basic introduction to
how to implement this type of modeling. The book is composed of sixteen
chapters that provide the reader an introduction to the many dimensions
of successful model development and interaction with stakeholders.
In Chapter 1 (Johnson, Otto, and Deller), the reader gains an
introduction to the history of the kinds of models employed by the
Community Policy Analysis Network (CPAN), an umbrella organization that
unites the book's contributors (mostly agricultural economics
faculty) across the Land Grant system. The chapter also offers insights
into how requests from policy makers are typically framed, and some
comments on various types of community indicators before concluding with
a discussion of the organization of the book.
Chapter 2 (Scott and Johnson) provides an overview of the
challenges facing rural America. The chapter authors then describe some
particular issues facing rural governments before concluding with some
comments on the role researchers can play in informing local government
policy.
Chapter 3 (Otto and Swenson) provides an overview of the various
kinds of local government in the United States, the services they
provide, their sources of revenue, and the amount of money they allocate
to their functions. They conclude by pointing out that rural governments
face particular challenges due to low population densities and aging
infrastructure.
Chapter 4 (Scott and Johnson) provides a more detailed discussion
of the formation and functions of CPAN, and the Rural Policy Research
Institute's role in supporting CPAN. Chapter 5 (Shields) discusses
the philosophical foundations that guide the CPAN group's modeling
efforts and offers a brief taxonomy of major types of community
forecasting and impact models. Chapter 6 (Johnson) introduces the reader
to conceptual and practical issues associated with integrating spatial
labor markets into models of the community's economy, while Chapter
7 (Deller) does the same for the local public sector.
Chapters 8 through 12 offer example models from Missouri (Johnson
and Scott), Iowa (Swenson and Otto), Nevada and neighboring counties
(Harris, Shonkwiler, Ebai, and Janson), and Texas (Evans and Stallmann).
Along the way the reader learns how local conditions and priorities get
translated into very different models, even when the guiding principles
and conceptual foundations are similar.
Chapter 12 (Cox and Swenson) provides an overview of the major
sources of federal data for the kinds of models discussed in the book,
while Chapter 13 (Swenson and Shields) introduces the types of
off-the-shelf software used to construct many of the models. Reliance on
readily available data and software has helped the network keep their
activities affordable, an important consideration in making the results
of this kind of modeling approach accessible to limited resource
communities, a value that is consistent with the Land Grant mandate.
In Chapter 14 (Kovalyova and Johnson), basic standard indicators of
model performance are introduced, discussed, and applied to
Missouri's model. This is an underdeveloped area within the
group's activities and substantial important contributions to the
literature could be made here in the future.
Chapter 15 (Henry, Barkley, and Deller) provides key considerations
in developing scenarios in community modeling, and make the important
point (p. 229) that in community policy analysis, "'rules of
thumb' can never be correctly applied" because the impacts of
a change vary substantially from one community to the next. The chapter
also offers an example scenario from Wisconsin's model. Chapter 16
(Deller) concludes the book with some excellent ideas for engaging
community leaders through multiple visits and provides examples of how
this class of models has been used to address local policy questions.
In conclusion, this is a fine contribution that sets a
higher-than-usual standard for an edited volume. Not only was the
architecture of the book well conceived, but the execution is also quite
good. This reviewer found few typos, none of which confused the meaning,
and very few instances of repeated information across the sixteen
chapters (pages 141 and 189 providing a notable exception). The book
could have been a bit broader in citing works from authors outside of
the CPAN group. For example, the Web Book of Regional Science provides
easily accessible material on the basic theory of the group's
modeling approaches that could make the book more understandable for
those not familiar with input--output and related models, the regional
science journals are replete with applications that complement the
example models presented, and the community development literature
offers alternative ways of structuring community engagement and public
policy dialog. Citing these non-CPAN works could have enriched the
reader with a broader set of experiences from which to draw upon in
developing models and using them to create more informed policy
decisions at the local level. Finally, the lack of recent citations
indicates that the book may have been "in press" for a year or
two. But these are minor complaints about an otherwise useful addition
to the literature.
Scott Loveridge
Michigan State University
COPYRIGHT 2007 American Agricultural Economics
Association Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.