Articles in press or under review
<li> William L. Swann, Terri L. Schreiber, Steven Wright, Mark W. Davis, Sojeong Kim, <br>
Serena Y. Kim, Alex Osei-Kojo, & Megan Lamiotte. 2020. "Local Policy Activity and Commitment<br>
to Addressing the US Opioid Crisis: A Cross-Sectional Survey of County Governments."<br>
<i>Journal of Public Health Management & Practice</i>. In Press.</li><br>
<li> William L. Swann, Sojeong Kim, Serena Y. Kim, & Terri L. Schreiber. 2020. "Urban-Rural Disparities in<br>
Opioid Use Disorder Prevention and Response Activities: A Cross-Sectional Analysis."<br>
Under Review.</li><br>
<li> Serena Y. Kim, Make-or-Buy Decisions in Airport Solar Financing: A Transaction Cost Approach, <br>
Under Review.</li><br>
</ol>
Articles published
“Updating the Institutional Collective Action.” Serena Y. Kim, William L. Swann, Christopher M. Weible, Thomas Bolognesi, Rachel M. Krause, Angela Y. S. Park, Tian Tang, Kiernan Maletsky, & Richard C. Feiock.
Policy Studies Journal. [Sage Pub]
- Serena Y. Kim. 2020. "Institutional Arrangements and Airport Solar PV." Energy Policy [Elsivier]
- Swann, W. L., McMullen, S., Graeve, D., & Kim, S. Y. 2019. "Community Resistance and Discretionary
Strategies in Planning Sustainable Development: The Case of Colorado Cities."
Urban Planning, 4(4), 98-110. [Cogitatio Press] - Koo, M. G., & Kim, S. Y. 2018. "East Asian Way of Linking the Environment to Trade in Free Trade
Agreements." The Journal of Environment & Development, 27(4), 382-414. [Sage Pub] - Swann, W. L., & Kim, S. Y. 2018. "Practical Prescriptions for Governing Fragmented Governments."
Policy & Politics, 46(2), 273-292. [Ingenta Connect]
Book chapters and blog posts
- Serena Kim, William L. Swann, & Richard C. Feiock. 2020. “Collective Learning and Institutional Collective
Action in Fragmented Governance.” In Knowledge for Governance. Vol 15. Knowledge and Space,
edited by Johannes Glückler, Gary Herrigel, & Michael Handke. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer.
[Springer] - William L. Swann & Seo Young Kim. 2018. “Strategies for Collaborating in Fragmented Governments.”
[Policy and Politics Journal Blog]