| Michael A. Pagano holds a B.A. from the Pennsylvania
State University and in 1980 earned a Ph.D. from the University
of Texas at Austin. Between 1980 and 2001, he was professor of
political science at Miami University and is currently professor
and director of the Graduate Program in Public Administration
at the University of Illinois at Chicago and an Institute Fellow
in the Great Cities Institute.
He is co-editor of Urban Affairs Review (housed in GCI), a member
of the Committee for the Study of the Long-term Viability of Fuel
Taxes for Transportation Finance of the Transportation Research
Board, and Principal Investigator for a Pew Charitable Trust project
(Government Performance Project) to grade the states on Infrastructure
Management, which was released in the February issue of Governing
magazine. He co-authored a 2004 Georgetown University Press book
with Ann O'M. Bowman entitled, Terra Incognita: Vacant Land and
Urban Strategies. With Professor Bowman he also is coauthor of
Cityscapes and Capital (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995).
His Duke University Press book on urban infrastructure, Cities
and Fiscal Choices, was published in 1985. Since 1991, he has
written the annual City Fiscal Conditions report for the National
League of Cities and since 2003 he has written a column called
"The Third Rail" for State Tax Notes, which examines
contemporary local government fiscal issues. He was co-editor
of the "Annual Review of American Federalism" issue
of Publius: The Journal of Federalism from 1988-95. He has published
over 50 articles on urban finance, capital budgeting, federalism,
transportation policy, infrastructure, urban development and fiscal
policy; delivered over 60 papers; and received funding from the
Brookings Institution, CEOs for Cities, National Research Council,
U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, Lincoln
Institute of Land Policy, National League of Cities, State of
Ohio, and elsewhere.
His current research projects include a study of the tax structures
of the nation's municipalities, an assessment of the municipal
commuter tax, the spatialization of revenue structures, and issues
of local government finance. |