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First published on January 4, 2008, doi:10.1177/1078087407311396

Urban Affairs Review 2008;43:875.

A more recent version of this article appeared on July 1, 2008


Article

The Adapted Cities Framework: On Enhancing Its Use in Empirical Research

Jered B. Carr* and Shanthi Karuppusamy

Wayne State University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jcarr{at}wayne.edu.


   Abstract
Analysts are calling attention to a new era of municipal reform and to the convergence of the mayor-council and council-manager forms of government. H. George Frederickson, Gary Johnson, and Curtis Wood have proposed a new framework that explains the nature and extent of this convergence. The authors think this "adapted cities" framework is a potentially important advance in the understanding of municipal structure but note that empirical scholars have largely ignored the framework. This stems from the lack of a process for coding cities into this framework and from difficulties in operationalizing its categories. The authors contribute to this important topic by presenting a general process for coding cities on council-manager and mayor-council platforms into the adapted cities framework.


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