Daniel Hummel
Idaho State University
10 Papers
10 Citations
Daniel Hummel is an academic researcher from Idaho State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Government & Public finance. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Right‐sizing cities in the united states: defining its strategies
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the right-sizing paradigm of planning and propose a strategy to deal with the problem of right sizing in the context of a right-sized organization.
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Traffic Tickets Public Safety Concerns or Budget Building Tools
TL;DR: This article explored the rationale for the traffic tickets and provided a state-level analysis on the occurrence of tickets and its relation with budget or public safety factors, finding that public safety concerns as evident in fatal crashes data has a significant and larger negative effect on the issuance of traffic tickets than budget concerns as measured by state credit ratings, unemployment rates, and housing prices.
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Immigrant-Friendly and Unfriendly Cities: Impacts on the Presence of a Foreign-Born Population and City Crime
TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess whether these policies have attracted or repelled the foreign-born population in these cities, and they contribute to the ongoing literature on whether that foreignborn population is having an effect on city crime.
9
Inter-State Internal Migration: State-level Wellbeing as a Cause
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the relationship between subjective wellbeing and in-migration and found that the wellbeing of a state is an incentive for inmigration to that state as the wellbeing in that state increases.
9
Civic crowd-funding: a potential test of the voluntary theory of public finance for public capital goods
TL;DR: A discussion of the Voluntary theory of public finance can be found in this paper, where the authors explore the new approach to funding capital projects and explore future directions of research that include the continuing application of this approach, the increasing engagement of citizens in the administrative process of government and increasing budget constraints.
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