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Full-Text Articles in Urban Studies and Planning
Green Buildings: Lease Structure, Productivity, And Regional Economic Impacts, Eun Kyu Lee
Green Buildings: Lease Structure, Productivity, And Regional Economic Impacts, Eun Kyu Lee
ETD Archive
In an effort to apply the sustainability movement to the built environment, sustainable construction has gained substantial strength and momentum in global society. A growing body of literature reveals the positive effects of sustainable, or green, buildings in terms of real estate market premiums, energy cost savings, employee productivity, and regional economic growth. In this context, my dissertation examines three research topics pertaining to sustainable buildings, and does so in three separate chapters.
The first study discusses the effect of lease structure on the tenant’s willingness to pay for energy-efficient building features, and compares the tenant’s stated willingness to pay …
From Planning To Action: An Evaluation Of State Level Climate Action Plans, Serena E. Alexander
From Planning To Action: An Evaluation Of State Level Climate Action Plans, Serena E. Alexander
ETD Archive
Climate change is one of the most daunting problems of our time requiring innovative responses to its causes and consequences. In the United States, the long absence of strong federal leadership along with growing public awareness of the problem created a fertile ground for state-level climate action planning. To date, 34 states have adopted Climate Action Plans (CAPs). The question that this study addresses is: Does state-level climate action have the potential to reduce carbon emissions significantly? This question was examined by assessing the relationships between CAPs, emissions reduction targets, plan implementation and emissions mitigation. My hypothesis was that CAPs …
To Reframe A Constitution: Public Service In A Consumptive State, Steven T. Salmi
To Reframe A Constitution: Public Service In A Consumptive State, Steven T. Salmi
ETD Archive
This normative analysis builds upon Ulrich Beck's world risk society theory to argue that the United States is making a shift of revolutionary proportions from an administrative state to a consumptive state. Public administration theory is assessed for its ability to address a consumptive state's unprecedented dynamics, e.g., accelerating technoscientific development and mega-hazards such as global warming. Qualitative evidence suggests that the field's adaptability has been limited by a continued, if generally unacknowledged, embrace of obsolete normative commitments such as to a politics-technoscience dichotomy, contempocentrism, and overconsumption. The sustainability movement, a discourse coalition with roots largely outside public administration, is …