JEAN-CLAUDE GARCIA-ZAMOR CURRICULUM VITAE (Updated in ... · 1 JEAN-CLAUDE GARCIA-ZAMOR CURRICULUM...
Transcript of JEAN-CLAUDE GARCIA-ZAMOR CURRICULUM VITAE (Updated in ... · 1 JEAN-CLAUDE GARCIA-ZAMOR CURRICULUM...
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JEAN-CLAUDE GARCIA-ZAMOR
CURRICULUM VITAE
(Updated in February 2019)
OFFICE ADDRESS: Department of Public Policy and Administration
Florida International University
Miami, Florida 33199
Tel: (305) 348-0428
Fax: (305) 348-5848
E-mail address: [email protected]
Website: http://faculty.fiu.edu/~garciaz
HOME: 6039 Collins Avenue
Apartment # 717
Miami Beach, Florida 33140
Tel: (305) 861-6512
Mobile: (786) 564-4922
E-mail address: [email protected]
EDUCATION
Ph.D. Public Administration New York University 1968
M.A. Latin American History New York University 1967
M.P.A. Public Administration University of Puerto Rico 1961
B.A. Political Science University of Puerto Rico 1959
LANGUAGES
English, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Creole. Fluent in speaking, reading and writing all
five languages. Also some fair knowledge of German.
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SUMMARY OF PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY (FIU): - Starting in January 1990 to the
present, full professor with indefinite tenure in the Department of Public Policy and
Administration; Affiliated Faculty Member at FIU’s Kimberly Green Latin American and
Caribbean Center; and Affiliated Scholar at FIU’s Jack D. Gordon Institute for Public Policy.
LEIPZIG UNIVERSITY (Germany): - From 1999 to 2013, Invited Professor of Ethics and
Public Management teaching summer classes on organizational theory, ethics, and public policy.
In June 2007, the President of Leipzig University designated me an Honorarprofessor (Honorary
Professor) in the Institute of Politics of the university. I was the first American scholar to
receive this designation in a major university of the former East Germany. Leipzig University,
Germany’s second oldest, was founded in 1409. Goethe and Nietzsche were both alumni.
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Ph.D. is from Leipzig University. I was teaching and doing research
work at Leipzig University for 15 consecutive year.
HOWARD UNIVERSITY: - Lecturer in the Department of Political Science from 1971 to
1980. From 1980 to 1989 full professor with indefinite tenure in the Department of Political
Science of the College of Liberal Arts and Graduate Professor in the Graduate School of Arts
and Sciences.
UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM (UNDP): - In1993, I was appointed
Non-Resident Chief Technical Adviser (CTA) of an Administrative Reform project financed by
the United Nations in Sao Tome and Principe. In addition, I have been a consultant in various
UNDP projects in more than a dozen other African countries.
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GROUP, INC.: - President. April 1975 to July 1977
and from August 1979 to July 1980. On May 13, 1975, I incorporated a consulting group, with
the participation of 24 associates who had wide experience as consultants for the American
Government and international organizations. These associates had contractual agreements to
work on I.D.G. projects in their fields of expertise. They included economists and public
administrators with special training and experience in pre-investment planning and evaluation
and in project formulation, evaluation, and administration.
INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK: - Controller. August 1977 to July 1979. The
Inter-American Development Bank had a Review and Evaluation System headed by a group of
three Controllers who were elected by the Board of Executive Directors of the Bank. In July
1977 I was elected Controller for a two-year term. The objectives of the reviews and evaluations
conducted under the System were as follows:
(a) to provide, for the Board and, through it, for the Board of
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Governors and the member countries, an independent program of
selective, continuing comprehensive examinations of the manner in
which the Bank was discharging its responsibilities under the
Agreement Establishing the Bank;
(b) to ascertain if the Bank's activities were conducted in a manner
designed to attain the objectives intended, in an effective and
efficient way, at the lowest reasonable cost, particularly as regards
the effectiveness of implementation and administration of the loan
and technical assistance activities of the Bank, in light of the
agreement Establishing the Bank and the policies and directives of
the Executive Directors and the Board of Governors, bearing in
mind the banking and international character of the institution and
its role in promoting economic development; and
(c) to facilitate decisions by the Board which would improve the Bank's
performance, and the subsequent implementation of said decisions by
the Management of the Bank.
THE WORLD BANK: - Consultant in the Department of Urban Projects. December 5, 1976 to
February 28, 1977. As part of a three-month consulting contract I spent four weeks in Brazil in
1977 working in five Brazilian states to review the performance of existing urban planning and
development institutions. Following field work in Brazil, I submitted a 50-page report to the
World Bank. The report covered the following activities:
(a) a review existing of urban planning and development institutions
paying particular attention to the division of responsibility among
federal, state and metropolitan agencies especially in the fields of
shelter, infrastructure, urban transport, and social services;
(b) an assessment of existing capacities for planning, financing and
implementing of programs and projects by local institutions in the
fields identified under (a);
(c) an identification of programs and institutions suitable for Bank
participation and support and a preliminary listing of key
institutional aspects requiring attention during project formulation
and preparation.
ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES: - Senior Specialist in Public Administration.
June 1, 1971 to March 31, 1975. As a Senior Specialist in the O.A.S. Development
Administration Program, I conducted research and study, technical assistance, and training
activities. In the area of research and study, I was responsible for program formulation,
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coordination, and implementation, both in headquarters supervision and in field project
supervision. During my four years at OAS, I was directly responsible for studies of Haiti,
Barbados, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Brazil, Chile, and Venezuela. I visited all member
states and established liaison with the principal country authorities responsible for planning,
budget, administrative reform and training functions.
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN: - Assistant Professor of Government. September
1969 to May 1971. As an Assistant Professor in the Department of Government I taught two
courses each semester, a graduate one and an undergraduate one, in the fields of Latin American
Politics, International Organizations and Public Administration.
CONSULTING ASSIGNMENTS AND OTHER ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES
2011 to 2013 During these three years I again spent the full three summer months in Leipzig,
Germany teaching and doing research at Leipzig University. My 12th book was completed and
was published in December 2013 by Springer Publisher. Its title is: Strategies for Urban
Development in Leipzig, Germany: Harmonizing Planning and Equity. I received from Florida
International University a full-paid sabbatical leave to work on the manuscript of that book
during the period from January to August 2011.
2010 I spent the summer doing research at Leipzig University for the manuscript of my 12th
book. I received and signed a book publishing agreement with Springer Science+Business
Media, LLC (233 Spring Street, New York, N.Y. 10013).
2009 I was appointed a member of the Editorial Board of Public Administration Review
(PAR) for a three-year term effective in January 2010. PAR is the premier journal of public
administration. I was also officially notified that my application for a Fulbright Award for the
Spring Semester 2011 has been approved by the peer review process. During the 2009 summer I
spent three full months at Leipzig University to teach and do research work. This was the 11th
consecutive summer visit to Leipzig University. While in Leipzig I went to Bialystok, Poland, to
teach an intensive seminar at the Stanislaw Staszic College of Public Administration.
2008 I delivered a keynote address on “Building a legacy of compassion, care and
understanding” the 5th annual fundraising dinner of the Haitian Students Foundation, Inc. held on
Saturday April 5 at the Hilton Palm Beach Airport Hotel in West Palm Beach.
2007 I received official notification that I had been selected as a Fulbright Fellow for spring
semester 2007-08 to be affiliated with the Faculty of Law and Administration of Warsaw
University for 5 months, beginning February 2008. For personal and professional reasons I later
had to decline accepting the grant.
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2006 I presented a research paper on “Crisis of Governance in Small States” at an international
conference on Governance, Institutions and Networks that was held at the University of the West
Indies in St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago, October 18 – 20th.
2005 I was offered to serve a three-year term on the Editorial Board of Comparative
Technology Transfer and Society. The journal is an academic journal in the field of science and
technology studies published by Johns Hopkins University Press and sponsored by the Colorado
Institute for Technology Transfer and Implementation.
2004 I was invited to deliver a lecture on “Globalization and the New World Order in the
Context of the New European Union” at the Bialystok School of Public Administration in
Bialystok, Poland, on May 25. The lecture was part of a series of activities that took place
throughout Poland in 2004 to celebrate that country’s entry into the European Union on May 1st.
2003 I presented a paper on “Justice Expectations and Redress to Human Rights Violations in
the Former East Germany” at the 19th World Congress of the International Political Science
Association (IPSA) that was held in Durban, South Africa, June 29 to July 4, 2003.
2002 I was a consultant in Washington, D.C. in November for a program executed by L.T.
Associates, Inc. I was the senior trainer for a module in public management for high-ranking
public servants from Africa.
2001 I was a consultant in Washington, D.C. in January for a program financed by the World
Bank and executed by L.T. Associates, Inc. I was the senior trainer for a module on “Leadership
and Team Building” for high-ranking public servants from Guinea-Conakry and Madagascar.
I also presented a paper on “Public/Private Cooperation in the United States” at a seminar at the
Yunnan College of Administration in Kunming in the Province of Yunnan in China, in June. I
participated in that seminar while I was a visiting guest at the Chinese National School of
Administration in Beijing, China. The Chinese National School of Administration (CNSA) is a
quite extraordinary institution. It has a role similar to that of the French National School of
Administration (ENA) in France in that, if one wants to rise to the top levels of government in
China, one does go through CNSA at some point in one's career. However, unlike ENA, it is
also a major research center for public policy. In that regard, its research probably has a
significantly greater impact on Chinese public policy than say the Kennedy School's research
does on US public policy.
2000 I was a consultant in Egypt for 10 days in February to train a group of 15 petroleum
engineers in modern organizational theory. The sessions took place at the Palmera Beach Resort
in Ain El Sukhna, in the Red Sea, 80 minutes by car from Cairo.
1999 I lectured at Leipzig University in the former East Germany and at Postdam University in
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the outskirts of Berlin. I also visited several universities in Portugal. The trip to Leipzig was the
beginning of what will be a long institutional affiliation with that university.
1998 I attended a conference on “Ethics and the Culture of Development: Building the
Sustainable Economy” in Havana, Cuba, between May 30 and June 7, 1998. The conference
was sponsored by UNESCO and featured important theoreticians and practitioners from around
the world as well as leaders from business, finance, government and non-governmental
organizations. A fruitful dialogue was held in separate small groups by more than 250 people
from the following 32 countries: Argentina, Belau, Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa
Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, France, Great Britain, Haiti,
Honduras, Hungary, Laos, Mexico, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Norway, Paraguay, Peru, Spain,
Switzerland, South Africa, Trinidad and Tobago, United States, Venezuela, Vietnam, and
Zimbabwe. Approximately 2/3 of the participants were from outside Cuba. There was a strong
presence of women, as well as a racial and geographic diversity among the participants.
The purpose of the conference was to promote a framework and a vision for building a
sustainable economy. The participants shared their experiences and ideas during the working
sessions of four commissions around four major themes:
* Building a Sustainable Economy: The Role of Enterprises and the Market.
* Ethics and Sustainable Development: The Role of Science and Technology.
* Education and Culture for a Sustainable Civilization.
* Social Movements, Government Initiatives and the Right Sustainable Development.
1997 I spent two weeks in May in Malta participating in an international gathering at the
Foundation for International Studies of the University of Malta. I also spent two weeks in Seoul,
South Korea to participate in a World Congress and to lecture at Hanyang University.
In December, I lectured on "Public Administration - A View from Other Countries and
Implications for U.S. Public Administrators" at the Executive Leadership Institute for the
National Forum for Black Public Administrators. Also in December, I was the keynote speaker
at a Conference on Leadership organized by the Society of Haitian-American Professionals.
1996 I spent one month in May-June visiting academic and cultural institutions in New Zealand
and Australia and two weeks in July-August in Oaxaca, Mexico doing research on "Conflicts and
Cooperation between Citizens and Public Bureaucracies".
1995 I was contracted by Development Assistance Corporation, a Washington D.C.-based
consulting firm, to work as an Organization Management Specialist in an Economic Policy
Reform Support (EPRS) project in the Republic of Guinea. I spent ten days in Conakry and six
days in N'Zerekore in July and August. This activity was funded by the United States Agency
for International Development (USAID).
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I was also invited by the Institute of Social Studies (ISS) of The Netherlands to participate as
an external examiner on a Thesis Committee of a Ph.D. candidate. I spent one week in Holland
as a Visiting Scholar at the ISS in June.
I was also invited in August to organize a session on Ethics at a "Municipal Governance
Strengthening Workshop" organized by Florida International University and Metropolitan Dade
County in August. The session was in Spanish. A dozen senior municipal employees from
South America attended.
1994 I was contracted by the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the United Nations
as an Institutions Specialist to work in a Natural Resources Management Project Mission in
Trinidad and Tobago. I spent three weeks in Trinidad and Tobago and two weeks at FAO
Headquarters in Rome to write the report.
In September, I was invited by the City of Miami International Trade Board to address the
Health Ministers of the Americas. The theme of the meeting was: "Executive Decision-Making
in the Health Sector." This "Hemispheric Health Ministers Meeting" was one of several pre-
"Summit of the Americas" event that took place prior to the meeting of the hemisphere's Chiefs
of State in Miami in December.
1993 I was appointed Non-Resident Chief Technical Adviser (CTA) of an Administrative
Reform project financed by the United Nations in Sao Tome and Principe. I took several trips to
Sao Tome and Principe during the year, spending ten weeks there and three days at the United
Nations Headquarters in New York working in the project.
I was also hired by The Mitchell Group, Inc. to work as a Senior Management Trainer at the
African Development Bank (ADB). The training was designed for senior staff and members of
the Board of Directors of ADB. I spent one week at ADB Headquarters in Abidjan, Ivory Coast,
and two weeks in La Baie des Sirenes in Grand-Bereby where the training sessions took place.
This activity was funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID.)
I was a member of the outside review committee for the Division of Public Administration of
the University of New Mexico in October. The four other members of the committee were the
Associate Dean of the L.B.J. School of Public Affairs, the Dean of the College of Public Health
of the University of Oklahoma, the Associate Dean of Engineering of the University of Florida
and Chet Newland, a distinguished former President of the American Society for Public
Administration (ASPA.) and a Professor Emeritus at the University of Southern California.
I was also a member of an off campus Committee of "three recognized authorities in Public
Administration" to review the file of an Associate Professor in Public Administration at the
University of New Mexico who was seeking promotion to Professor.
I was Interviewed on CNN National News on November 12 about newly elected President
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Clinton's plan for dealing with Haiti's political situation.
1992 I was contracted by the United Nations Development Program to be the team leader of a
mission of three experts that visited Sao Tome and Principe from June 29 to July 18. The
mission formulated a project document on administrative reform for the country.
I was chosen by the President of Florida International University to be member of a 15-
member Presidential Task Force on Cuba to draw a contingency plan to deal with any internal
political change in Cuba.
1991 I was appointed the Chairman of the David J. Gould Scholarships Committee of the
American Society for Public Administration (ASPA.) These scholarships were established to
defray the costs of students traveling to ASPA's National Conferences.
I was chosen by the Department of Public Administration of the University of Ottawa to be
an external evaluator to review the scholarly work of an Associate Professor who was a
candidate for a full professorship.
1990 I was hired as a consultant by Clark Atlanta University to serve as a resource person at a
curriculum development workshop in April. Accordingly I designed a model and presented a
sequence of courses with justifications for both the masters and Ph.D. degrees to a group of 20
workshop participants.
During the months of July and August I was hired by the National Association of Schools of
Public Affairs and Administration (NASPAA) to be the leader of a 3-member team to prepare a
diagnostic study on the capacity of the Republic of Guinea's Ministry of Agriculture and Animal
Resources in the area of project planning and management.
I spent the summer in Conakry and prepared a 75 page –report to identify the strengths and
weaknesses of the Ministry's existing system of project planning and administration, its logic and
coherence. The report also discussed the actions needed to improve the administrative and
managerial capacity of the Ministry in this area. These actions were discussed by type (policy
changes, training, technical assistance, material support, study tours, etc.) and in terms of time
frame (i.e. short, medium or long-term).
At the end of the mission, I organized a three-day workshop to present the findings of the
mission to Ministry officials. About 40 high ranking civil servants and project chiefs attended.
NASPAA was executing this project for USAID.
1989 I was contracted by the International Management Development Institute (IMDI) of the
University of Pittsburgh to visit Haiti in January. The objectives of the mission was to contact
donors, IMDI alumni and Haitian institutions likely to send participants to the 11th Annual
Francophone Development Management Seminar that was held in Pittsburgh from June to
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August, 1989. Also, I arranged for future in-country management improvement and teaching
efforts. During a week visit in Haiti I contacted almost twenty key individuals including the
Directors of all the foreign donors’ offices in Port-au-Prince. Because of the political situation in
the country, USAID, the main sponsor of the Haitian participants in the previous Pittsburgh
seminars, could no longer finance such participation since the U.S. Congress had halted most
forms of aid to Haiti. One purpose of my mission was to try to find alternative sources of
financing.
During the month of June and July I visited twelve states of India and lectured at three
universities (in New Delhi, Jaipur, and Madras.)
1988 I was contracted by Development Alternatives, Inc. for the period from November 19,
1987 to January 5, 1988 to be the Team Leader of a seven-member team to go to Guinea-Bissau,
to conduct a 5-week on-site evaluation of the South Coast Agricultural Development Project. As
the Evaluation Team Leader, I was responsible for defining with team members the evaluation
methodologies and criteria to be used in reviewing the different aspects of the project. I
supervised and directed the team's effort and insured that a coherent and concise evaluation
report was completed within the desired time figure. As Team Leader, I was also responsible for
reviewing the draft evaluation report with host country officials and the USAID staff in Bissau
and for finalizing the document after such reviews.
1987 I was contracted by the Public Administration Program to the United Nations to teach a
two-week seminar in "Modern Management Techniques." In Kampala, Uganda. About 25
participants attended the Seminar. They were senior civil servants from different department and
agencies of the government of Uganda.
1986 I was contracted by the United Nations Development Program to be the co leader of a
team that visited Guinea-Conakry, Guinea-Bissau, and the Central African Republic to identify
projects that were most likely to have a significant impact on the performance of public
administration in these countries. The mission identified the most pertinent problems in the three
countries that could be addressed by external technical assistance and proposed a program of
solutions, both immediate and intermediate in time horizon composed of related
projects/activities. The team worked also at the U.N. headquarters both before and after the field
trips.
1985 I was contracted by Development Alternatives, Inc., to conduct an evaluation of a USAID
Development Administration project in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. During the 20-day evaluation
(l5 days in Honduras and 5 days in Washington) a 50 page evaluation document was prepared to
assess the effectiveness of the technical assistance provided by USAID to the Ministry of
Finance in the area of Revenue Administration, Treasury Management, Integrated Accounting
System, Public Employee Bonding, and Government Procurement.
I spent five weeks in Bamako, Mali under a contract from the Pragma Corporation to help
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design a project for USAID. I was the team leader of the Pragma component of the USAID
team. As an Institution Specialist and Personnel Systems Specialist I wrote a 55-page report on
ways to implement proposals for voluntary departure of civil servants to improve the
effectiveness of the Malian government personnel and financial management systems.
I spent 3 weeks in Montreal, Canada at the National School of Public Administration
(ENAP) to conduct a seminar in Comparative Public Administration. Twenty Canadian civil
servants and management officers from the private sector attended the Seminar.
I had a 10-day contract to act as trainer in a Program Evaluation Workshop at the USAID
offices in Rosslyn, Virginia. About 20 AID evaluation officers attended the workshop.
I had a 12-day contract to act as trainer in another Program Evaluation Workshop in
Tunis, Tunisia. In addition to 40 USAID evaluation officers stationed in AID field offices in
countries of the Near East and Asia, 40 government counterparts from those regions attended the
workshop.
1984 I spent 10 days in Brazzaville, the People's Republic of Congo, to conduct a Seminar on
Human Resources Management to high level civil servants of the government of the People's
Republic. The consultancy was financed by USAID.
I spent two weeks in Togo and one week in the People's Republic of Benin to conduct
seminars on Human Resources Management in the cities of Lome and Kara (Togo), and Cotonou
(Benin). These missions were also paid by USAID.
I was contracted by the National School of Public Administration (ENAP) of the
University of Quebec to conduct a seminar at ENAP's headquarters in Quebec City.
1983 I was contracted by the National School of Public Administration (ENAP) of the
University of Quebec to conduct a Seminar in Comparative Public Administration at the
Montreal Campus.
1982 I carried out a mid-project evaluation of the Resources Training Center (RTC) of the
Department of Education of Haiti (USAID project) over a period of 10 days. I evaluated four
principal areas of project implementation: 1) current problem areas and recommendations for
solutions; 2) the existing project agreement and potential modifications for future project
implementation; 3) procedures for incorporating the RTC project into the Joint Project
Implementation Plan Format of the USAID mission to Haiti; and 4) future institutional
requirements necessary to insure effective project implementation.
Over a two-month period, I carried out an external evaluation of the Haitian
Development Foundation (HDF) under a contract with the Pan American Development
Foundation (PADF) of Washington, D.C. The final draft of the evaluation was submitted to
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PADF in early August and described the present managerial situation at HDF and made specific
recommendations for immediate improvements and future directions. The HDF impact was
discussed in terms of job creation and income generation.
1981 At the Research Triangle Institute at Research Triangle Park, North Carolina and at their
Washington office (A.I.D. project on "Urban Financial Management"). I collaborated in the
design of a model to help identify cities that have a "successful" financial management practice.
At the Planning Ministry and the Administrative Reform Commission in Port-au-Prince,
Haiti (USAID mission). I studied the feasibility of the Government of Haiti's administrative
reform program in terms of its contributions to the socio-economic development of Haiti. I
provided recommendations on the design and implementation of that reform, and presented an
assessment of systems change in selected ministries including financial control measures and
personnel management systems to further development efforts.
At the Ministry of Agriculture in Port-au-Prince, Haiti (USAID mission). I returned to
Haiti with a Food Sector Strategy team to assess local institutional capacity to implement a food
security program. This assignment also involved integrating the findings of the Administrative
Reform study with the work of the Food Sector Strategy team members.
OTHER PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Counselor at the Embassy of the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Chad to the United
Nations in 1961. While studying at New York University, I answered an ad looking for a young
university student with perfect knowledge of French to help establish the Chad Mission's
headquarters in New York. Economic restrictions prevented the newly-independent country
from sending too many diplomats abroad, and the few who went to New York did not speak a
word of English. Because of this unusual situation, after a few weeks in that job I was given
diplomatic credentials and I had the unique opportunity to actively participate in the sessions of
the General Assembly of that year as a member of the Chad delegation.
OTHER TEACHING EXPERIENCE I have also lectured at the Venezuelan National School of Public Administration, Caracas,
Venezuela; the U.S. Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs; the Catholic University of
Argentina, Mendoza, Argentina; University of Pittsburgh; the American University; the Foreign
Service Institute of the U.S. Department of State; the University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho; the
National School of Public Administration, Montreal, Canada; three universities in India (in New
Delhi, Jaipur, and Madras); The Institute of Social Studies (ISS) in The Netherlands; Potsdam
University in Berlin, Germany; Leipzig University also in Germany; Hanyang University in
Seoul, South Korea; the Bialystok School of Public Administration in Poland; and the Yunnan
College of Administration, in Kunming, The People’s Republic of China.
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PROFESSIONAL CONFERENCES On April 13, 1999, in his State of the University Address to the Faculty Senate, FIU
Acting President and Provost Mark B. Rosenberg stated: “I was privileged to attend in
the North Campus a world class colloquium on ethics. It featured a diverse panel of
academicians from Korea, Colombia, India and the U.S. On their way to a major
international meeting in Orlando, Professor Jean-Claude Garcia-Zamor of our School of
Policy and Management had insisted that they divert to Miami to present papers and
exchange views in a square table format with the 20 graduate students in his ethics class.
As a tangible result of the force of the vision, resourcefulness and persuasiveness of their
professor, our students were face to face and dialoguing in an intimate setting with some
of the world’s leading experts on the material. Was this a “mighty shove” or a “tiny
push?” How do we quantify it in our annual report to the BOR or to the Federal
Government? Indeed, how does our current obsession with “institutional effectiveness”
undermine or motivate the “mighty shoves” and “tiny pushes” that will be necessary each
and every day to make this a better institution?”
I participate actively (as a speaker) in at least one professional conference each year. Below are
the ones I attended over the past five years.
In March 2013, I presented a paper at the ASPA national conference in New Orleans
In April 2013, I presented a paper at the annual meeting of the Urban Affairs Association
in San Francisco.
In March 2014, I presented a paper and chaired a panel at the ASPA national meeting that
was held in Washington, D.C.
In March 2015, I presented a paper at the ASPA meeting that was held in Chicago.
In July 2015, I presented a paper at the annual meeting of the International Association of
Institutes and Schools of Administration (IASIA) that took place in Paris, France.
In March 2016, I presented a paper at the ASPA meeting that was held in Seattle,
Washington.
In March 2017: Paper presented at the ASPA meeting held in Atlanta, Georgia.
In April 2017: Paper presented at the Transatlantic Dialogue held at Florida International
University.
In June 2017: Paper presented at the International Congress of the International Institute
of Administrative Sciences held in Aix-en-Provence, France.
In March 2018: Paper presented at the ASPA meeting that was held in Denver, Colorado.
MEMBERSHIP IN PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES Inter-American Council of Washington, D.C. (President for 1977-1978).
American Society for Public Administration (ASPA). Elected to the Executive Council of ASPA
Section on International and Comparative Administration (SICA) for 1975-1978; elected SICA
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Chairman for 1979-1980. I served 2 3-year term in the Executive Committee of the Section on
Ethics. I have been a Life Member of ASPA since 1980.
American Political Science Association (APSA) Currently a member in good standing.
International Political Science Association (IPSA). Currently a member in good standing.
Society for International Development (Member of the Advisory Council of the Washington
Chapter 1976-1977 and 1977-1978).
American Consortium for International Public Administration (ACIPA). Member of the Board
of Directors for 1979-1980.
MEMBERSHIP IN BOARD OF DIRECTORS
I am presently a member of the Board of Directors of The Ancient Spanish Monastery that is
located in North Miami. The Monastery of St. Bernard de Clairvaux was built in Sacramenia, in
the Province of Segovia, Spain, during the period 1133-1144. Cistercian monks occupied the
monastery for nearly 700 years. The Cloisters were seized, sold, and converted into a granary
and stable due to a social revolution in that area in the mid-1830’s. In 1925 William Randolph
Hearst purchased the Cloisters and the Monastery’s out- buildings. The structures were
dismantled stone by stone, bound with protective hay, packed in some 11,000 wooden crates,
numbered for identification and shipped to the United States. About that time, hoof and mouth
disease had broken out in Segovia, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, fearing possible
contagion, quarantined the shipment upon its arrival, broke open the crates and burned the hay, a
possible carrier of the disease. Unfortunately, the workmen failed to replace the stones in the
same numbered boxes before moving them to a warehouse. Soon after the shipment arrived,
Hearst’s financial problems forced most of his collection to be sold at auction. The stones
remained in a warehouse in Brooklyn, New York, for 26 years. One year after Hearst’s death in
1952, they were purchased by Messrs. W. Edgemon and R. Moss for use as a tourist attraction.
It took 19 months and almost $1.5 million dollars to put the Monastery back together. The
duties of the Board of Directors are to make policies and raise funds to preserve this architectural
marvel and unique tourist attraction.
Member of the Board of Directors of the Alliance Française of Miami and Fort Lauderdale. The
Board members are Miami professionals and include bankers, lawyers, business leaders and a
university professor. The Alliance Française aims at developing cultural exchanges between the
United States and France while fostering friendship between the French and the American people
through both the organization of cultural and social events and French language courses (2009).
Member of the Board of Directors of ARTCENTER/SOUTH FLORIDA, the most prominent art
organization in Miami Beach. At the present, the ARTCENTER owns five large buildings on
Lincoln Road and is totally responsible for the urban renewal that is taken place there. Many of
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the other Board members are prominent citizens of Miami Beach who are very active in
community development and philanthropic work in Miami Beach (1998-1999).
Member of the Board of Directors of International United Black Fund, Inc. This Fund is an
international component of the United Black Fund of America, Inc. It addresses health, welfare,
and social concerns of developing nations in Africa, the Caribbean, Central and Latin America,
and Asia. The parent organization, the United Black Fund, was founded in 1969 to address the
need for a balanced and United Fund-raising effort on behalf of non-profit tax exempt
organizations serving health, social and cultural needs of Black and poor communities.
Member of the governing Board of the American Consortium for International Public
Administration (ACIPA). ACIPA is a non-profit consortium of professional and public interest
groups, government agencies, educational institutions, and private individuals. ACIPA
represents the United States in the International Institute of Administrative Sciences (IIAS) in
Brussels, Belgium (1979-1980).
Member of the Board of Directors of the Miami Beach Community Concert Association (l991-
1993.)
Member of the Board of Directors (and First Vice President of the Board) of the Alliance
Francaise of Miami (1992.)
OTHER ORGANIZATIONAL AFFILIATIONS Member of the Ethics Commission of the Miami-Dade School Board. Delegated by the
President of Florida International University, Dr. Modesto A. Maidique, to represent FIU. From
February 2002 to April 2004. The Ethics Commission met every month for a full morning with
the members of the School Board to review matters where ethical misconduct may be involved.
During the two years I served in the Commission, a Code of Ethics was drafted and later
approved by the Miami-Dade School Board.
Member of the Alliance for Ethical Government, an organization of government and business
people to monitor ethical compliance in Miami-Dade County governments and businesses.
Delegated by the President of Florida International University. 1999-2001.
OTHER TRAVELS I have visited each of the Latin American and Caribbean countries and have traveled extensively
throughout Western and Eastern Europe, Africa, New Zealand, Australia, Korea, India, Thailand,
the People’s Republic of China, Russia and Turkey. Many of these trips were taken in an official
capacity to hold discussions and negotiations with high-ranking government officials. They
were sponsored by the Organization of American States, the World Bank, the Inter-American
Development Bank, the U.S. Agency for International Development, the United States
15
Information Agency, the Pan American Development Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the
Volkswagen Foundation, and the United Nations Development Program.
MEMBERSHIP IN EDITORIAL BOARD OF REFEREED JOURNALS I was a member of the Editorial Board of the following journals:
Public Administration Review (the American Society for Public Administration’s flagship
journal). (2010-2013)
Global Virtue Ethics Review, an Internet-based Ethics refereed journal. (2006-2010)
Comparative Technology Transfer and Society, a refereed journal published by John Hopkins
University Press. (2006 -2011)
The Chinese Public Administration Review (CPAR, ISSN 1019-2433) (2008-2011)
Presently a member of the Editorial Board of two peer-review journals:
Public Organization Review; and
International Journal of Public Administration
BOOK REVIEW EDITOR OF A REFEREED JOURNAL I was the book review editor of Public Organization Review, a refereed journal that seeks to
advance knowledge of public organizations around the world. The journal is published by
Springler four times a year and is available in most major university libraries in the United States
and around the world (2008-2012).
SPECIAL HONORS AND AWARDS
On May 16, 2017, Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos A Gimenez on behalf of the Board of
County Commissioners and the community designated Tuesday May 16, 2017 as Dr. Jean-
Claude Garcia-Zamor Day proclaiming that “It is fitting and proper that the vast achievements
of this public servant be highlighted and applauded, as his diligence and efforts have brought
honor to the Haitian community in our midst.” This was the second time that I was so honored.
On April 14, 2001, former Miami-Dade County Mayor Alex Penelas had issued a similar
Proclamation.
The Black Female Development Circle, Inc, an FIU and proper that the vast organization of
black female students, awarded me a CERTIFICATE OF EXCELLENCE during their annual
banquet that was held on November 19, 2015 in the Graham Center of the university. The theme
of the evening was:”Tribute to a Black Man – The Era of the Classic Man.”
On February 9, 2016, I received an Ignite Torchbearer Award during the Annual Ignite
Breakfast “In appreciation of your commitment and dedication to FIU’s future.” FIU President
Mark Rosenberg was the only other Torchearer Award recipient in 2016.
16
On March 4, 2016, at a Service and Recognition Awards Ceremonny in the Graham Center, I
received a 25th Year Award Certificate. I actually joined FIU officially over 26 years ago, on
December 14, 1989.
In the Spring of 2014 the Board of Directors of the Section on International and Comparative
Administration (SICA) of the American Society for Public Administration (ASPA) decided to
give my name to the Best Paper Award that SICA gives every year at the national ASPA
conference to the best paper in the field of international and comparative administration
presented in the Fred Riggs Symposium. The award is now officially named the “Garcia-
Zamor Best Paper Award.”
On November 12, 2012, I was inducted as an Honorary Member of PI ALPHA ALPHA (PAA).
PAA is the national honor society formed to recognize and promote excellence in the study and
practice of public affairs and administration. In its constitution, the organization dedicates itself:
to encourage and recognize outstanding scholarship and accomplishment in public affairs and
administration; to promote the advancement of education and practice in the art and science of
public affairs and administration; and to foster integrity, professionalism, and creative
performance in the conduct of governmental and related public service activities. PAA honorary
membership identifies those whose careers have best advanced the ideals of "integrity,
professionalism, and creative performance" in public service and in Higher Education.
On June 19, 2007, the President (Rektor) of Leipzig University gave me a Certificate of
Appointment officially conferring to me the title of Honorarprofessor (Honorary Professor) in
the Institute of Politics of the University.
On June 7, 2007, the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board (FSB) selected me as a
Fulbright scholar grantee to Poland to do research and teach at Warsaw University during the
Spring Semester 2008. Unfortunately, the need to recruit four new junior faculty created a staff
shortage in my School and I had become engaged during that period as a member of the Search
Committee that was appointed to fill the vacancies.
Miami-Dade County Public Schools presented me with a plaque in June 2004 in appreciation for
my contributions to the Ethics Committee of Miami-Dade county Public Schools. For two years,
I had been one of the seven members of the Committee. My term expired in June 2004 after the
Committee completed the writing of a Code of Ethics for the schools system. The code was later
approved by the Board of Education and is presently being implemented.
On April 12, 2002, I was presented the “Outstanding New American Award” by Miami
Archbishop John C. Favalora. The award is presented yearly to prominent first-generation
Floridian immigrants who have had an impact on their communities. The wife of Florida
Governor Jeb Bush (who was born in Mexico) received also the award at the same ceremony.
17
Miami-Dade County Mayor Alex Penelas , on behalf of the Board of County Commissioners and
the community proclaimed Thursday April 12, 2001 as Jean-Claude Garcia-Zamor Day “in
recognition to this distinguish professional for his outstanding contributions to the community”.
In December 2000, the administration of Florida International University decided to honor me
because of my efforts to establish a scholarship at the university for needy Haitian students. In
addition to the usual requirements for financial aid, recipients for this scholarship need to be of
Haitian ancestry. The legislature of the State of Florida voted to contribute $100,000.00 to the
scholarship and an “endowment in perpetuity” in the amount of $300,000.00 was created. About
eight to ten students benefit every year from the scholarship. The university decided to name it:
The Jean-Claude Garcia-Zamor Scholarships for Haitian-American Students.
The Board of Directors of the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington, D.C. elected
me a Controller for the Board for a two-year term to help the Board evaluate the then-40
billion loans portfolio.
While still a student at New York University, the Government of the Republic of Chad appointed
me in the sixties as Counselor at the Embassy of the Permanent Mission of the Republic of
Chad to the United Nations. I established the Mission’s headquarters in New York and actively
participated in the sessions of the General Assembly as a member of the Chad delegation.
During that period, the U.S. State Department had given me full diplomatic status and immunity
as the member of a foreign country’s diplomatic staff.
PUBLICATIONS
BOOKS
Ethics and Policy Conundrum Created by Migrants’ Cultural Differences. (In preparation – will
appear in 2020). I signed a book contract with Palgrave/ Macmillan in mid-2018.
Ethical Dilemmas of Migration: Moral Challenges for Policymakers. New York: Springer
Publishers, 2018. 141 pp.
Strategies for Urban Development in Leipzig, Germany: Harmonizing Planning and Equity.
New York: Springer Publishers, 2014. 128pp.
The Leipzig Model: Myth or Reality? A Study of City Management in the Former East
Germany. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 2008. 312pp.
Bureaucratic, Societal, and Ethical Transformation in the former East Germany. (Editor).
Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 2004. 211pp.
18
Administrative Ethics and Development Administration. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of
America, 2001. 192 pp.
Public Administration in the Global Village. (co-editor with Renu Khator). Wesport,
Connecticut: Praeger Publishers, 1994. 188 pp.
Politics, Projects, and People. Institutional Development in Haiti. (co-Editor, with Derrick W.
Brinkerhoff). New York: Praeger Publishers, 1986, 288 pp.
Public Participation in Development Planning and Management. Cases from Africa and Asia.
(Editor). Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1985. 264 pp.
Financing Development in Latin America. (co-Editor, with Stewart E. Sutin). New York:
Praeger Publishers, 1980, 354 pp.
Politics and Administration in Brazil. (Editor). Washington, D.C.: University Press of America,
1978, 575 pp.
The Ecology of Development Administration in Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Barbados.
(with a Preface by Fred W. Riggs) Washington, D.C.,: Organization American States, 1977, 122
pp.
Public Administration and Social Changesin Argentina: 1943-1955. Rio de Janeiro: Editor
Mory, 1968, xv-190 pp.
La Administración Pública en Haiti. (with a Preface by Richard M. Morse) Guatemala: Editorial
Landivar, 1966, 186 pp.
CHAPTERS PUBLISHED IN EDITED HANDBOOKS
“A theoretical approach to spiritual leadership in public organizations: Is spiritual leadership a
good fit for public managers? (Co-authored with Kira Haensel). In The Routledge Companion to
Management and Workplace Spirituality. Edited by Joan F. Marquez. Abington, United
Kingdom: Routledge Publishers, 2018.
“Workplace Spirituality and Organizational Performance.” (Co-authored with Kira Haensel). In
Handbook of Workplace Spirituality & Fulfillment. Edited by Dhiman, Satinder, Roberts, Gary
E., and Crossman, Joanna. (co-author with Kira Haensel). Basingstoke, United Kingdom:
Palgrave/ Macmillan Publishers, 2018
19
“Ethical Concerns and Migrants.” (Co-authored with Kira Haensel). In Global Encyclopedia of
Public Administration, Public Policy, and Governance. Edited and published by Springer. New
York: Springer Publishers, 2016.
“Haiti: Fragile state or failed nation?” (Co-authored with Christa L. Riemington). In Fragile
States in the America, pp. 241-258. Edited by Jonathan D. Rosen and Hanna S. Kassab. New
York: Lexington Books – An Imprint of Rowman Littlefield, 2016.
“Public Administration during the time of the Aztecs, Mayas, and Incas: What can be learned
from their experience?” In “Azetcs, Incas, and Mayas: Lessons for Modern Development
Administration.” In Civilization and Administration: Ancient Contributions to Modern Public
Administration Edited by Ali Farazmand and Dimitri Argyriades. New York: Springer, 2016.
"Enhancing Community and Economic Development Post-Disaster through the Increased
Resilience of Women" (co-authored with Bridgette Cram). In Cities and Disasters. Edited by
Davia Cox Downey. CRC Press – Taylor & Francis Group. 2015.
“The Obama Doctrine in Haiti” (Co-authored with Christa L. Remington). In The Obama
Doctrine in the Americas, pp. 53-68. Edited by Hanna S. Kassab and Jonathan D. Rosen. New
York: Lexington Books – An Imprint of Rowman Littlefield, 2016.
“Haiti: Prisons, Organized Crime, and Drug Trafficking” (Co-authored with Christa L.
Remington). In Prisons in the Americas in the Twenty-First Century, pp. 77-92. Edited by
Jonathan D. Rosen and Marten W. Brienen. New York: : Lexington Books – An Imprint of
Rowman Littlefield, 2015.
“Cooperation and the war on drugs in Haiti” (Co-authored with Christa L. Remington). In
Cooperation and the war on drugs: Trends in the 21st Century, pp. 159-172. Edited by Robert
Zepeda and Jonathan D. Rosen. New York: Lexington Books-An Imprint of Rowman
Littlefield, 2014.
“Pathologies in Public Administration. How Critical is the Concept of Administrative Ethics?”
in Pathologies in Public Administration in Poland (pp. 45-57). Edited by Patrycja J. Suwaj and
Dariusz R. Kijowski. Warsaw, Poland: Oficyna, a Wolters Kluwer Business. Published for the
Polish Association for Public Administration Education, 2009.
“Economic Challenges and Public Policy Dilemmas Facing the New Member-Countries of the
European Union” in Transition Economies: 21st Century Issues and Challenges (pp. 151-169).
Edited by Gergo M. Lakatos. Hauppauge, New York: Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2008.
”Globalization and Governance in the former East Germany: the European Union Factor” in
Handbook of Globalization and Public Administration (pp. 325-348). Edited by Ali Farazmand
and Jack Pinkowski. London: Taylor and Francis/CRC Press, 2007.
20
“Neoteric Theories for Development Administration in the New World” in Comparative Public
Administration: The Essential Readings (pp. 297-320). Edited by Eric E. Otenyo and Nancy S.
Lind. London: Elsevier Ltd., 2006.
“Sound Governance and Administrative Ethics in the Former East Germany: The Dilemmas of a
Transition” in Handbook of International Development and Governance (pp. 329-356). Edited
by Ahmed Shafiqul Huque and Habib Zafarullah. London: Taylor and Francis/CRC Press, 2006.
“The Struggle of Small Bureaucracies to Develop Traditional Ethical Policies” in Sound
Governance. Policy and Administrative Innovations (pp. 290-307). Edited by Ali Farazmand.
Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 2004.
“Haiti” in Encyclopaedia Britannica. 2003 Book of ther Year (p. 440). Chicago: Encyclopaedia
Britannica, Inc., 2003.
“Workplace Spirituality in the United States and the Former East Germany” in The Handbook of
Workplace Spirituality and Organizational Performance (pp. 314-335). Edited by Robert A.
Giacalone and Carole L. Jurkiewicz. New York: M.E. Sharpe, Inc., 2003.
“Haiti” in Encyclopaedia Britannica. 2002 Book of the Year (pp. 434-435). Chicago:
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., 2002.
“Development Administration in Early Americas: Aztecs, Incas, and Mayas” (pp. 89-102);
“Problems of Policy Implementation in Developing Countries” (pp. 711-720), and “Ethical Use
of the Internet: Implications for Public Administration” (pp. 795-804) in Handbook of
Comparative and Development Administration. (Second Edition, Revised and Expanded).
Edited by Ali Farazmand. New York: Marcel Dekker, 2001.
“Haiti” in Encyclopaedia Britannica. 2001 Book of the Year (p. 438). Chicago: Encyclopaedia
Britannica, Inc., 2001.
“Haiti” in Encyclopaedia Britannica. 2000 Book of the Year (pp. 433-434). Chicago:
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., 2000.
“How Can Administrative Ethics Reduce Conflicts Between the Bureaucracy and Its Clientele: A
Comparative Approach” in Bureaucracy-Citizen Interface. Conflicts and Consensus (pp. 83-
106). Edited by R.B. Jain and Renu Khator. New Delhi, India: B.R. Publishing Corporation,
1999.
"Social Service Delivery for Immigrants in South Florida" in Solving Problems in Urban Areas
Characterized by Fragmentation and Divisiveness (pp. 185-200). Edited by Fred W. Becker and
Milan J. Dluhy. Stamford, Connecticut: JAI Press Inc., 1998.
21
"The Application of May Weber's Model in Non-Western Public Bureaucracies" in A New
Appreciation of Riggs’ Prismatic Model (a festschrift in honor of Fred W. Riggs 70th Birthday)
(pp. 76-88). Edited by Ramesh K. Arora. New Delhi, India: Associated Publishing House,
1992.
"Voluntary Early Retirement by Malian Civil Servants" in Administration of Human Resources.
Comparative Foci (pp. 138-158). Edited by Ramesh K. Aurora and R.M. Khandelwal. Jaipur,
India: Arihant Publishers, 1992.
"Problems of Public Policy Implementation in Developing Countries" in Handbook of
Comparative and Development Public Administration (pp. 435-444). Edited by Ali Farazmand.
New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc., 1991.
"Risks and Conflicts in Centralized State Intervention in Developing Organizations" in Studies in
Economics (pp. 219-226). Edited by Manuel J. Pelaez. Barcelona, Spain: University of Malaga,
1990.
"Haiti" in Latin America and Caribbean Contemporary Record. Volume II: 1982-83 (pp. 698-
710). Edited by Jack W. Hopkins. New York: Holmes and Meir, 1984.
"Haiti" in Latin America and Caribbean Contemporary Record. Volume I: 1981-82 (pp. 577-
586). Edited by Jack W. Hopkins. New York: Holmes and Meir, 1983.
ARTICLES
“Migrant Population in Mega-City Regions in China.” International Journal of Social Science
and Economic Research. (co-author with Min Xiong). June 2018, Vol. 3, No. 6, pp. 2377-2389.
“Citizen Participation in Vietnam’s Local Government: Impact on Transparency and
Accountability.” In Journal of Public Administration and Governance. (co-author with Thai Thi
Thanh Hoa). December 2017, Vol. 7, No. 4, pp. 38-57.
“The Global Wave of Refugees and Migrants: Complex Challenges for European Policy
Makers.” In Public Organization Review. December 2017, Volume 17, No. 4, pp. 581-594.
“Influence of Human Capital on Economic Growth: A Comparative Analysis of Education
Development in Kazakhstan, South Korea, Singapore and Malaysia.” In Journal of Public
Administration and Governance. (co-author with Assel Shaimerdenova). 2017, Vol. 7, No. 3,
pp. 30-46.
22
“History and Challenges of U.S. Immigration Policymaking.” In Journal of Public
Administration and Governance. (co-author with Kira Haensel). 2016, Vol. 6, No. 4, pp. 139-
149.
“The Globalization of the Migration Problem.” In International Journal of Social Science and
Economic Research. (co-author with Kira Haensel). 2016, Volume 1, Issue 10, pp. 1566-1579.
“The Role of Public Administration in the Elimination of Inequality”. In Journal of Public
Administration and Governance. (co-author with Katie Schuldiner). Vol. 6, No. 2 (2016), pp.
128-137.
“U.S. Policy Reforms and Solutions to Illegal Immigration”. In International Journal of
Management Sciences. Vol. 7, No. 5, 2016, pp. 226-234.
“Developing a Sustainable Community Health Framework for Divergent Urban Landscapes –
Ptobing the Public Health/Urban Planning Interface”. In Public Policy and Administration
Review. (co-author with Sanjeev Sirpal and Suman Kakar). December 2015, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp.
13-25.
“Quality of Governance and Ethical Public Delivery Service (PDS) in Developing Countries.”
In Journal of Management and Strategy. Vol. 6, No. 3 (2015), pp. 28-37.
“#PublicAdmin in 140 Characters or Less: SNS and the Administrative Procedures Act.” In
International Journal of Art & Humanity Science.” (co-author with Vivian Cueto) Volume 2,
Issue 5 (Sept.-Oct. 2015), pp. 26-42.
“Governance – Why Gender Matters?” In Global Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences.
(co-author with Alina Parbtani). Vol. 4, No. 3 (2015), pp. 78-86.
“The great American experiment: Developing citizen participation through youth civic
engagement and education.” In International Review of Social Sciences and Humanities (co-
author with Sofia C. Trelles). Vol. 10, No. 1 (2015), pp. 8-15.
"The Seven50 Plan and Regional Governance in Southeast Florida." In Current Urban Studies
(co-author with Ramon Trias). Vol. 3, No. 4 (2015), pp. 300-312.
“Organizational Social Capital and Anticorruption policies: an exploratory analysis.” In Public
Organization Review (co-author with Michele Tantardini), Vol. 15, Issue 4. 2015
“The bureaucratic transition of the former East Germany from socialism to market economy.” In
Journal of Contemporary Management. October 2014, pp.1-11.
23
“The Sustainable Development of Miami: Tackling the Homeless Problem.” In
Current Urban Studies (co-author with Vaiva Kalesnikaite). Vol. 2, September
2014, pp.188-197.
“The Privatization of Prisons and Its Impact on Transparency and Accountability in Relation to
Maladministration.” In International Journal of Humanities Social Sciences and Education (Co-
author with Andrea Headley). Vol. 1, Issue 8, August 2014, pp.23-34.
“Institutional Bureaucratic Representation in Gender Mainstreaming.” In Global Journal of
Interdisciplinary Social Sciences (co-author with Sebawit G. Bishu). Vol. 3 (3), May-June 2014,
pp. 229-237.
“25 years later: How reunified are the former East and West Germany?” In Warsaw East
European Review. Volume V. 2014
“Ferrel Heady’s Typology Revisited”. In Journal of International Studies and Development
(co-author with Eilert Stamm). Vol. 4, Spring 2014, pp. 23-44.
“The role of cultural promotion as an integral component of Leipzig's Urban Development”. In
Current Urban Studies. Vol. 1, No. 4, December 2013, pp. 87-91.
“A Theoretical Guideline to define Transparency and Accountability in Public Organizations”.
In Global Advanced Research Journal of Social Science. Vol. 1, Number 7, December 2012, pp.
142-151.
“Public participation in urban development: The case of Leipzig, Germany”. In Journal of
Public Administration and Policy Research. October 2012, Vol. 4, Number 4, pp. 75-83.
“Tendencies of the Development of Public Service in Lithuania”. In Public Organization
Review (co-author with Jolanta Urbanovič). Volume 11, Number 2, June 2011, pp. 177-192.
“Decentralizing Cuba’s Health Care System”. In Journal of International Studies and
Development (co-author with Ilyana Albarran). Volume 1,Number 1, Fall 2010, pp. 132-157.
“Social Equity in Urban Development. The Leipzig Experience”. In International Review of
Public Administration. September 2009, Volume 14, Number 2, pp. 1-11.
“Short Bibliographical Notes on 32 Essential Readings for MPA Students”. In Public Policy and
Administration (ISSN 1648-2603). July 2009, Number 28, pp. 107-115.
“Privatization of Public Services in Leipzig: A Balancing Act between Efficiency and
Legitimacy”. (co-author with Sebastian Noll). In Public Organization Review. March 2009,
Volume 9, Number 1, pp. 83-99.
24
“Domestic Wastewater Management in a Rural Community in Colombia” (co-author with
Claudia Lorena Trejos Gomez and Juan Mauricio Castano Rojas). In Comparative Technology
Transfer and Society, December 2008, Volume 6, Number 3, pp. 212-235.
“Searching for Appropriate Approaches to Wastewater Management at Community Level: Case
Study of a Colombian Rural Locality” (co-author with Claudia Lorena Trejos Gomez). In Public
Administration – National and International Studies (ISSN 1730-5306), Volume 12 (2008), No.
2, pp.238-257.
“Attempts at Restorative Justice for Crimes Committed in the Former German Democratic
Republic”. In International Journal of Restorative Justice (ISSN 1715-2011), Volume 3
(September 2007), No. 2, pp. 6-25.
“The Phenomenon of the Enlargement of the European Union Analyzed in the Context of
Professor Hartmut Elsenhans’s Theories on Globalization”. In Public Administration – National
and International Studies (ISSN 1730-5306), Volume 9 (2007), No. 1, pp. 5-22.
“Morals, Ethics, and Integrity: How Codes of Conduct Contribute to Ethical Adult Education
Practice” (co-authored with Silvana Ianinska) in Public Organization Review: A Global Journal.
Volume 6 (2006), No. 1, pp. 5-22.
“The Quest for Public Service Ethics: Individual Conscience and Organizational Constraints”
(co-authored with Genevieve Enid Kyarimpa) in Public Money & Management. Volume 26
(2006), No. 1, pp. 31- 38.
“The City of Leipzig as a European Success Story in Economic Development” in International
Public Management Journal. Volume 8 (2005), No. 1, pp. 23-37.
“Globalization and the New World Order in the Context of the New European Union” in Public
Administration – National and International Studies (ISNN 1730-5306), Volume 3 (2004), No.
1, pp. 5-15.
“Workplace Spirituality and Organizational Performance” in Public Administration Review.
Volume 63 (May/June 2003), No. 3, pp. 274-282.
“Latin American Ancient Civilizations and their Administrative Legacies” in Public
Administration Quarterly. Volume 27 (Spring 2003), No. 1, pp. 65- 86.
“Ethics Revisited in a Society in Transition: The Case of the Former East Germany” in Public
Administration and Development. Volume 22 (2002), pp. 235-248.
“Conundrums of Urban Planning in a Global Context: The Case of the Frankfurt Airport” in
Public Organization Review. Volume 1 (2001), No. 4, pp. 415-435.
25
"Administrative Practices of the Aztecs, Incas, and Mayas: Lessons for Modern Development
Administration" in International Journal of Public Administration. Vol. 21, No. 1, 1998, pp.
145-171.
"An Administrative Ethics Prescription for Public Bureaucracies" in The Annals of Public
Administration Research. No. 15 (1997), pp. 91-104 .
"Obstacles to Public Policy Implementation in the Third World" in Research in Public Policy
Analysis and Management . Vol. 6, 1995, pp. 179-192, and in Advances in Developmental
Policy Studies. Vol. 1, 1996, pp. 197-212.
"Voluntary Early Retirement by Malian Civil Servants" in Administrative Change. Vol. 14, No.
2, June 1987, pp. 18-34.
"Administrative Reform in Haiti: Problems and Prospects (with Ian Mayo-Smith) in Public
Administration and Development. January-March 1983, Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 39-48.
"Regional Planning and Budgeting in Venezuela." In Planning and Administration. Autumn
1976, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 72-77.
"Rumor as Political Communication in Developing Countries" in Administrative Change. July-
December 1976, Vol. 4, No. 1, 68-73.
"Observations on the Portuguese Bureaucracy" in SICA Papers (Section on International and
Comparative Administration of the American Society for Public Administration), February 1976,
Vol. XIII, No. 1, pp. 15-19.
"A Bibliography of Latin American Bibliographies Related to Political Science in the libraries of
the University of Texas at Austin (with Gary R. Welles), in Exchange Bibliographies. Council
of Planning Librarians, Monticello, Illinois, December, 1975, pp. 1-14.
"Rumor as Political Communication in Haiti and Brazil" in Short Essays in Political Science.
Published papers of the Spring 1974 Conference of the National Capital Area Political Science
Association. Washington, D.C., 1975.
"Justicialismo en Argentina: La Ideologia Politica de Juan Domingo Peron" in Revista de
Ciencias Sociales, September 1973, Vol. XVI, No. 3, pp. 341-363. Written in Spanish.
"Micro-Bureaucracies and Development Administration: in International Review of
Administrative Sciences, 1973, Vol. XXXIX, No. 4, pp. 417-423.
"A Typology of Creole Bureaucracies" in International Review of Administrative Sciences, 1972,
26
Vol. XXXVIII, No. 1, pp. 143-158.
"Social Mobility of Negroes in Brazil" in Journal of Inter-American Studies and World Affairs,
1970, Vol. XXII, No. 2, pp. 242-254.
"Papadocracy" in Caribbean Review, Spring 1970, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 3-9.
"Development Administration in the Commonwealth Caribbean," in International Review of
Administrative Sciences, 1970, Vol. XXXVI, No. 3 pp. 201-214.
"An Ecological Approach to Administrative Reform: The Brazilian Case" in International
Review of Administrative Sciences, Vol. XXXV. No 4, 1969, (pp. 315-320).
"O Desafio Americano" in Revista de Administracao Pública, Brazil, 1st Semester 1968, No. 3
pp. 223-231. Written in Portuguese.
BOOK REVIEWS
“Modernizing Government in Eastern Europe” in Public Administration Review, Volume 67,
Issue 2, March/April 2007, pp. 357-359.
The African Religions of Brazil by Roger Bastide, Translated by Helen Sebba. Baltimore: The
John Hopkins University Press, 1978, pp. XXVIII, 494. Notes. (Glossary. Index) in The
Americas, Vol. CCCVI, No. 4 (April 1980) pp. 562-563.
Black Into White. Race and Nationality in Brazilian Thought by Thomas E. Skidmore. (Oxford
University Press, 1974, pp. 299) in The Journal of Politics, Vol. 37, No. 3 (August, 1975.)
The Aftermath of Sovereignty: West Indian Perspective edited by David Lawenthal and Lambros
Comitas (Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1973, pp. 422. in the Journal of Politics, Vol. 35, No. 3
(August, 1973.)
Haiti: The Politics of Squalor by Robert I. Rotberg, with Christopher K. Claque. (Twentieth
Century Fund, 1971, 456 pp.) in the American Political Science Review, Vol. LXVI, No. 2
(March, 1972), p. 1021.
The Abolition of the Brazilian Slave Trade by Leslie Bethell. Cambridge University Press, 1970,
425 pp.) in Africa Report, Vol. 15, No. 8, November 1970), pp. 40-41
Venezuela: Search for a Middle Ground by Raymond E. Crist and Edward P. Leaky (Van
Nostrand Reinhold Company, 1969, 128 pp.) in the Hispanic American Historical Review. Vol.
51, No. 2 (May, 1971) p. 412.
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