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Raul Perez Lejano, Ph.D., D.Env.
Associate Professor Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University New York, NY 10003 USA
Phone 1 949 8128150 Email: [email protected]
___________________________________________________________________________
PRIMARY AREAS OF INTEREST My area of scholarship revolves around the analysis of risk and vulnerability in lower-income
communities in the U.S. and the developing world. Ongoing projects include analysis and
adaptation to extreme weather and storm surge in East and Southeast Asia. Another active area of
work involves policy remedies for environmental health risks to air toxics in the inner city. I
employ multi-method approaches to policy evaluation, as described in my book, Frameworks for
Policy Analysis: Merging Text and Context --e.g., evaluation of disaster risk prevention programs
in the developing world combines ethnographic, organizational, and quantitative methods. As a
PhD student, I worked with Lloyd Shapley, Nobel laureate in economics, on the analysis of
distributional aspects of policy. I maintain a strong research interest in equity in social and
environmental policy. I also develop novel approaches, such as narrative analysis, to analyzing
human/environment relationships (as described in my book, The Power of Narrative in
Environmental Networks, with MIT Press).
PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND
I maintain an active professional profile; engagements include an ongoing World Bank project on
communicating storm surge risks in developing countries and a program evaluation for the World
Health Organization on the resilience of health systems to extreme weather. I work with
community-based organizations and agencies, both internationally (e.g., resilience to global change
in Bangladesh) and in the U.S. (e.g., community-based air toxics monitoring in Val Verde and
Huntington Park, California). These engagements intersect with my teaching --and example of this
is an Eco-Tourism masterplan for Sai Kung, Hong Kong, developed with graduate students in my
international field studies course.
EDUCATION Ph.D. Environmental Health Sciences, UCLA (Concentration: Policy Analysis) 1998
D.Env. Environmental Science & Eng., UCLA (Concentration: Risk Assessment) 1992
M.S. Sanitary Engineering, UC Berkeley 1986
B.S. Civil Engineering, Univ. of the Philippines (cum laude) 1984
ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS
Associate Professor New York University 2014 - 2017
Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, & Human Development
Adjunct Professor Inst. of Water Policy, National Univ. of Singapore 2016 - 2017
Associate Professor The University of Hong Kong 2012 - 2013
Dept. of Urban Planning & Design (on leave from UC Irvine)
Associate Professor University of California, Irvine 2002 - 2012
Department of Planning, Policy, & Design
Visiting Asst. Professor Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2000 - 2002
Department of Urban Studies and Planning
PUBLICATIONS
BOOKS Lejano, Raul (2006), Frameworks for Policy Analysis: Merging Text and Context. Routledge Press,
New York.
Lejano, Raul, Helen Ingram, and Mrill Ingram (2013), The Power of Narrative in Environmental
Networks, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
Lejano, Raul (2016), 政策分析框架 融合文本与语境 Frameworks for Policy Analysis: Merging Text and
Context, Chinese translation. Tsinghua University Press, Beijing, PRC.
BOOKS UNDER CONTRACT
Lejano, Raul et al., Narrative, Identity, and the City, John Benjamins Press, Amsterdam.
Lejano, Raul et al., A Phenomenology of Institutions: Comparative Perspectives on China and Beyond,
Routledge Press, New York.
JOURNAL ARTICLES (Thematic Listing)
Relationality and Collective Action / Pro-Environmental Behavior
Lejano, Raul and Helen Ingram (2011), "Modeling the commons as a game with vector
payoffs,” Journal of Theoretical Politics 24(1):66-89.
Lejano, Raul (2017), "Vector payoff model of collective action: Theory and field testing," (working
draf).
Lejano, Raul and Francisco Fernandez (2014), “Norm, network, and commons: The invisible hand
of community,” Environmental Science & Policy 36:73-85.
Lejano, Raul and Daniel Stokols (2013), “Social ecology, sustainability, and economics,”
Ecological Economics 89:1-6.
Lejano, Raul (2011), “A note on solution concepts for nontransferable utility games,” Journal of
Mathematical Economics 47:777-780.
Lejano, Raul (2008), "The phenomenon of collective action: Modeling institutions as structures
of care," Public Administration Review May/June: 491-504.
Lejano, R.P.., & Davos, C. (1999). "Cooperative solutions for sustainable resource management.,"
Environmental Management, 24(2), 167-175.
Lejano, R. (2006), “Theorizing peace parks: Two models of collective action,” Journal of Peace
Research 43(5): 563-581.
Lejano, Raul (2017). "Assemblage and relationality in social-ecological systems," Dialogues in
Human Geography 7(2):192-196.
Kyriazi, Z., Lejano, R., Maes, F., & Degraer, S. (2016). "A cooperative game-theoretic framework for
negotiating marine spatial allocation agreements among heterogeneous players." Journal of
Environmental Management 187:444–455.
Kyriazi, Z., Lejano, R., Maes, F. and Degraer, S. (2015). "Bargaining a net gain compensation
agreement between a marine renewable energy developer and a marine protected area
manager," Marine Policy 60:40-48.
Lejano, Raul and Climis Davos (1995), “Cost allocation of multi-agency water resource projects,”
Water Resources Research 31(5):1387-1393.
Lejano, R.P.., & Davos, C. (1999). "Cooperative solutions for sustainable resource management.,"
Environmental Management, 24(2), 167-175.
Lejano, R. (2006), “Theorizing peace parks: Two models of collective action,” Journal of Peace
Research 43(5): 563-581.
A Relational Approach to Risk Communication
Lejano, R., J.M. Tan, & M. Wilson (2016), "A textual processing model of risk communication:
Learning from Typhoon Haiyan," Weather, Climate, and Society 8(4):447-463.
Lejano, R., Tan, J. M., & Wilson, M. (2015). "Communicating risk: Learning from Typhoon Haiyan."
Nature, 518(7537), 35 (commentary).
Lejano, R., Munoz-Melendez, G., Aguilar Benitez, I., and S.J. Park (2010), "On the need to
redesign the CDM carbon trading program," Env. Science & Technology 44:6914-6916.
Stokols, D., R. Lejano, & J. Hipp (2012), “Enhancing the resilience of human-environment
systems: A social ecological perspective,” Ecology & Society 18(1):7.
Lejano, R. et al. (2017), "Communicating the risks of extreme weather events," Weather,
Climate, and Society (forthcoming).
Lejano, R. (2017), "Reframing how we communicate and manage risks from extreme weather
events," Risk Analysis (in process).
Narrative and Climate Action / Denial
Lejano, R. (2017). "Ideology and the narrative of climate skepticism," Bulletin of the American
Meteorological Society (forthcoming).
Lejano, R. and J. Dodge (2017). "The narrative properties of ideology: The adversarial turn and
climate skepticism in the U.S.", Policy Sciences 50(2), 195-215.
Lejano, Raul, Joana Tavares-Reager, and Fikret Berkes (2013), “Climate and narrative:
Environmental knowledge in everyday life, “ Environmental Science & Policy 31:61-70.
Lejano, R. P., & Leong, C. (2012). "A hermeneutic approach to explaining and understanding
public controversies," Journal of Public Administration Research & theory, 22(4),793-814.
Ingram, M, H. Ingram, and R. Lejano (2015). "Environmental action in the anthropocene: The
power of narrative networks," J. of Env. Policy and Planning, 1-16.
Ingram, M., Ingram, H., & Lejano, R. (2014). "What’s the story? Creating and sustaining
environmental networks," Environmental Politics, 23(6), 984-1002.
Lejano, R., Chui, E., Lam, T., & Wong, J. (2017). "Collective action as narrativity and praxis:
Theory and application to Hong Kong’s urban protest movements," Public Policy and
Administration, 0952076717699262.
Risk Analysis
Lejano, Raul and C. Scott Smith (2006), “Incompatible land uses and the topology of cumulative
risk,” Environmental Management 37(2):230-246.
Lejano, Raul et al. (2002),“Fair share: siting noxious facilites as a risk distribution game under
nontransferable utility,” J. of Environmental Economics and Mgt 43:251-266.
Park, S.J., Ogunseitan, O. A., & Lejano, R. P. (2014). "Dempster‐Shafer theory applied to
regulatory decision process for selecting safer alternatives to toxic chemicals in consumer
products," Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management, 10(1), 12-21.
Lejano, Raul and Daniel Stokols (2010), "Understanding minority residents' perceptions of
neighborhood health risks and environmental justice: New methods, findings, and
policy implications," Journal of Architectural Planning and Research 27(2):107-123.
Lejano, Raul et al. (2011), “Patchwork of land use, tapestry of risk,” Journal of Environmental
Planning & Management 55(1):1-15.
Nixon, Hilary, Raul Lejano, and Richard Funderburg (2006), "Planning methodology for
predicting spatial patterns of risk potential from industrial land use," J. Environmental
Planning and Management.
Lee, E., R. Lejano, and R. Connelly (2013), “Regulation-by-information in areas of limited
statehood,” Regulation & Governance 7(3):387-405.
Environmental Justice and Air Toxics
Lejano, Raul and Richard Funderburg (2016). "Geographies of risk, the regulatory state, and the
ethic of care," Annals of the American Association of Geographers 106(5):1097-1110.
González, E. R.P. Lejano, et al. (2007), "Participatory action research for environmental health:
Encountering Freire in the urban barrio," Journal of Urban Affairs, 29(1):79-102.
Lejano, R. and E. Gonzalez (2017). "Sorting through differences: The problem of planning as
reimagination," J. of Planning Education & Research 37(1):5-17.
Lejano, Raul et al. (2002), “Rationality as social justice and the spatial-distributional analysis of
risk,” Environment and Planning C, 20:871-888.
Lejano, Raul and Hiro Iseki (2001), “The question of environmental justice: The spatial distribution
of hazardous waste TSDs in Los Angeles,” J.of Urban Planning and Development 127(2):51.
Lejano, R. and S. Ajaps (2017). "Spatial justice and the caring state," Theory into Practice (accepted).
Institutional Approaches to International Development
Lian, H., & Lejano, R. (2014). "Interpreting institutional fit: Urbanization, development, and
China’s 'land-lost'." World Development, 61, 1-10.
Lejano, Raul and Savita Shankar (2013), “The contextualist turn and schematics of
institutional fit: Theory and case study from Southern India,” Policy Sciences 46(1):83-102.
Howlett, M., & Lejano, R. P. (2013). “Tales from the crypt: The rise and fall (and rebirth?) of policy
design,” Administration & Society, 45(3), 357-381.
Lejano, R. et al. (2007) "The importance of context: Integrating resource conservation with
local institutions," Society & Natural Resources 20(2):1-9.
Lejano, R. and Park, S.J. (2017). "Social policy and fertility patterns in developing countries:
Comparison and coupling of quantitative and qualitative analyses," Journal of Comparative
Policy Analysis (forthcoming).
Lejano, R. and A. Ocampo-Salvador (2006), “Comparative analysis of two community-based
fishers' organizations,” Marine Policy 30(6):726-736.
Lejano, R. (2006) “The design of environmental regimes: Social construction, contextuality, and
improvisation,” International Environmental Agreements 6(2):187-207.
Urban Theory
Lejano, R. and W-S Kan (2015). “Toward a new contextualism: Seeing urban regeneration
through an institutionalist lens,” International Journal of Urban Sciences 19(3):257-268.
Goldstein, B., A. Taufen Wessells, R. Lejano, and W. Butler (2015), “Narrating resilience:
Transforming urban systems through collaborative storytelling,” Urban Studies 52(7),
1285-1303.
Lejano, Raul (2008), "Technology and institutions: A critical appraisal of GIS in the planning
domain," Science, Technology & Human Values 33:653-678.
Gonzalez, Erualdo and Raul Lejano (2009), "New urbanism and the barrio," Environment &
Planning A, 41:2946-63.
González, E. R.P. Lejano, et al. (2007), "Participatory action research for environmental health:
Encountering Freire in the urban barrio," Journal of Urban Affairs, 29(1):79-102.
Lejano, R. and E. Gonzalez (2017). "Sorting through differences: The problem of planning as
reimagination," J. of Planning Education & Research 37(1):5-17.
Water Policy
Smith, C. Scott, Raul P. Lejano, Oladele Ogunseitan, and Aaron Hipp (2007), "Costeffectiveness
of regulation-compliant filtration to control sediment and metal pollution in urban
runoff" Environmental Science & Technology 41:7451-7458.
Lejano, Raul and Helen Ingram (2009), "Collaborative networks and new ways of knowing,"
Environmental Science & Policy, 12:653-662.
Leong, C. and R. Lejano (2016). "Thick narratives and the persistence of institutions: Using Q
methodology to analyse IWRM around the Yellow River," Policy Sciences 49(4): 445–465.
Lejano, Raul (2006), “Optimizing the layout and design of branched pipeline water
distribution systems,” Irrigation and Drainage Systems 20(5):125-137.
Taufen Wessels, A. and R. Lejano (2017). "Urban waterways and waterfront spaces: Social
construction of a common good," Journal of the Southwest 59(1/2):106-132.
Hipp, A., O. Ogunseitan, R. Lejano, and C. S. Smith (2006), “Optimization of stormwater
filtration at the urban/watershed interface,”Env. Science & Technology 40(15): 4794-4801.
Lejano, Raul et al.(1992), “Assessing the benefits of water reuse,” Water Env't & Technology 8:44-50.
JOURNAL ARTICLES (Full Chronological Listing)
J62 Lejano, R. et al. (2017), "Communicating the risks of extreme weather events," Weather,
Climate, and Society (forthcoming).
J61 Lejano, R. (2017). "Ideology and the narrative of climate skepticism," Bulletin of the
American Meteorological Society (forthcoming).
J60 Lejano, R. and J. Dodge (2017). "The narrative properties of ideology: The adversarial turn
and climate skepticism in the U.S.", Policy Sciences 50(2):195-215.
J59 Lejano, R. (2017), "Assemblage and relationality in social-ecological systems," Dialogues in
Human Geography, 7(2):192-196.
J58 Kyriazi, Z., Lejano, R., Maes, F., & Degraer, S. (2017). "A cooperative game-theoretic
framework for negotiating marine spatial allocation agreements among heterogeneous
players," Journal of Environmental Management, 187, 444-455.
J57 Lejano, R. and E. Gonzalez (2017). "Sorting through differences: The problem of
planning as reimagination," J. of Planning Education & Research 37(1):5-17.
J56 Lejano, R., Chui, E., Lam, T., & Wong, J. (2017). "Collective action as narrativity and praxis:
Theory and application to Hong Kong’s urban protest movements," Public Policy and
Administration, 0952076717699262.
J55 Taufen Wessels, A. and R. Lejano (2017). "Urban waterways and waterfront spaces: Social
construction of a common good," Journal of the Southwest 59(1/2):106-132.
J54 Lejano, R., J. Tan, and M. Wilson (2016), "A textual processing model of risk
communication: Lessons from Typhoon Haiyan," Weather, Climate, and Society 8(4):447-463.
J53 Lejano, R. and R. Funderburg (2016). "Geographies of risk, the regulatory state, and the
ethic of care," Annals of the American Association of Geographers 106(5):1097-1110.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24694452.2016.1179565.
J52 Leong, C. and R. Lejano (2016). "Thick narratives and the persistence of institutions: Using
the Q methodology to analyse IWRM reforms around the Yellow River," Policy Sciences
49(4): 445–465.
J51 Kyriazi, Z., Lejano, R., Maes, F., & Degraer, S. (2016). "A cooperative game-theoretic
framework for negotiating marine spatial allocation agreements among heterogeneous
players." Journal of Environmental Management 187:444–455.
J50 Goldstein, B., A.T. Wessells, R. Lejano (2015), “Narrating resilience: Transforming urban
systems through collaborative storytelling,” Urban Studies 52(7),1285-1303.
J49 Kyriazi, Z., Lejano, R., Maes, F. and Degraer, S. (2015). "Bargaining a net gain
compensation agreement between a marine renewable energy developer and a marine
protected area manager," Marine Policy 60:40-48.
J48 Lejano, R. and W-S Kan (2015). “Toward a new contextualism: Seeing urban
regeneration through an institutionalist lens,” Int. Journal of Urban Sciences 19(3):257-268.
J47 Ingram, M, H. Ingram, and R. Lejano (2015). "Environmental action in the
anthropocene: The power of narrative networks," J. of Env. Policy and Planning, 1-16.
J46 Lejano, Raul (2015). "Narrative disenchantment," Critical Policy Studies 93(3):368-371.
J45 Park, S. J., Ogunseitan, O. A., & Lejano, R. P. (2014). "Dempster‐Shafer theory applied to
regulatory decision process for selecting safer alternatives to toxic chemicals in consumer
products," Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management, 10(1), 12-21.
J44 Lian, H., & Lejano, R. (2014). "Interpreting institutional fit: Urbanization, development,
and China’s 'land-lost'." World Development, 61, 1-10.
J43 Lejano, Raul and Francisco Fernandez (2014), “Norm, network, and commons: The
invisible hand of community,” Environmental Science & Policy 36:73-85.
J42 Lejano, Raul, Eduardo Araral, and Dianne Araral (2014), “Introduction to the Special Issue:
Interrogating the Commons,” Environmental Science & Policy 36:1-7.
J41 Ingram, M., Ingram, H., & Lejano, R. (2014). What’s the story? Creating and sustaining
environmental networks. Environmental Politics, 23(6), 984-1002.
J40 Lejano, R. and S. Shankar (2013), “The contextualist turn and schematics of
institutional fit: Theory and case study from Southern India,” Policy Sciences 46(1):83-102.
J39 Lejano, Raul, Joana Tavares-Reager, and Fikret Berkes (2013), “Climate and narrative:
Environmental knowledge in everyday life, “ Environmental Science & Policy 31:61-70.
J38 Lejano, Raul and Daniel Stokols (2013), “Social ecology, sustainability, and economics,”
Ecological Economics 89:1-6.
J37 Lee, E., R. Lejano, and R. Connelly (2013), “Regulation-by-information in areas of
limited statehood: Lessons from the Philippines’ environmental regulation,” Regulation
& Governance 7(3):387-405.
J36 Howlett, M., & Lejano, R. P. (2013). “Tales from the crypt: The rise and fall (and rebirth?)
of policy design,” Administration & Society, 45(3), 357-381.
J35 Lejano, Raul and Ching Leong (2012), “A hermeneutic approach to explaining and
understanding public controversies,” Journal of Public Admin. Res. & Theory 22 (4): 793-814.
J34 Stokols, D., R. Lejano, & J. Hipp (2012), “Enhancing the resilience of human-environment
systems: A social ecological perspective,” Ecology & Society 18(1):7.
J33 Lejano, Raul and Helen Ingram (2011), "Modeling the commons as a game with
vector payoffs,” Journal of Theoretical Politics 24(1):66-89.
J32 Lejano, Raul (2011), “A note on solution concepts for nontransferable utility games,”
Journal of Mathematical Economics 47:777-780.
J31 Lejano, Raul et al. (2011), “Patchwork of land use, tapestry of risk,” Journal of
Environmental Planning & Management 55(1):1-15.
J30 Lejano, Raul; Munoz-Melendez, Gabriela; Aguilar Benitez, Ismael; and Sung Jin
Park (2010), "On the need to redesign the CDM carbon trading program,"
Environmental Science & Technology 44:6914-6916.
J29 Lejano, Raul and Daniel Stokols (2010), "Understanding minority residents' perceptions
of neighborhood health risks and environmental justice: New methods, findings, and
policy implications," Journal of Architectural Planning and Research 27(2):107-123.
J28 Gonzalez, Erualdo and Raul Lejano (2009), "New urbanism and the barrio,"
Environment & Planning A, 41:2946-63.
J27 Lejano, Raul and Helen Ingram (2009), "Collaborative networks and new ways of
knowing," Environmental Science & Policy, 12:653-662.
J26 Lejano, Raul (2008), "Technology and institutions: A critical appraisal of GIS in the
planning domain," Science, Technology & Human Values 33:653-678.
J25 Lejano, Raul (2008), "The phenomenon of collective action: Modeling institutions as
structures of care," Public Administration Review May/June: 491-504.
J24 Smith, C. Scott, Raul P. Lejano, Oladele Ogunseitan, and Aaron Hipp (2007), "Cost
effectiveness of regulation-compliant filtration to control sediment and metal
pollution in urban runoff" Environmental Science & Technology 41:7451-7458.
J23 E. R. González, R. P. Lejano, G. Vidales, R. F. Conner, Y. Kidokoro, B. Fazeli, and R.
Cabrales (2007), "Participatory action research for environmental health: Encountering
Freire in the urban barrio," Journal of Urban Affairs, 29(1):79-102.
J22 Lejano, Raul and Helen Ingram (2007), "Place-based conservation: Lessons from the
Turtle Islands," Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development 49(3):24-28.
J21 Lejano, Raul, Helen Ingram, John Whiteley, Daniel Torres, and Sharon Agduma (2007)
"The importance of context: Integrating resource conservation with local institutions,"
Society & Natural Resources 20(2):1-9.
J20 Lejano, Raul and Anne Taufen Wessells (2006), “Community and economic
development: Seeking common ground in discourse and in practice,” Urban Studies
43(9):1469-1489.
J19 Lejano, Raul and C. Scott Smith (2006), “Incompatible land uses and the topology of
cumulative risk,” Environmental Management 37(2):230-246.
J18 Hipp, Aaron, Oladele Ogunseitan, Raul Lejano, and C. Scott Smith (2006), “Optimization
of stormwater filtration at the urban/watershed interface,” Environmental Science &
Technology 40(15): 4794-4801.
J17 Nixon, Hilary, Raul Lejano, and Richard Funderburg (2006), "Planning methodology for
predicting spatial patterns of risk potential from industrial land use," J. Environmental
Planning and Management 49(6):829-847.
J16 Lejano, Raul and Alma Ocampo-Salvador (2006), “Comparative analysis of two
community-based fishers' organizations,” Marine Policy 30(6):726-736.
J15 Lejano, Raul (2006), “Optimizing the layout and design of branched pipeline water
distribution systems,” Irrigation and Drainage Systems 20(5):125-137.
J14 Lejano, Raul (2006), “Theorizing peace parks: Two models of collective action,” Journal of
Peace Research 43(5):563-581.
J13 Lejano, Raul (2006) “The design of environmental regimes: Social construction,
contextuality, and improvisation,” International Environmental Agreements 6(2):187-207.
J12 Lejano, Raul and Hirose Rei (2005), “Testing the assumptions behind emissions
trading in non-market goods: The RECLAIM Program in Southern California,”
Environmental Science and Policy 8:367-377.
J11 Lejano, Raul and Jonathon Ericson (2005), “Tragedy of the temporal commons: Spatial
patterns of soil-bound lead and the anachronicity of risk,” Journal of Environmental Planning
and Management 48(2):299-318.
J10 Kolodjiej, Kris, Raul Lejano, Chikako Sassa, Sushila Maharjan, Jalal Ghaemghami, and
Thomas Plant (2004), "Mapping the industrial archeology of Boston." URISA Journal,
16(1):5-12.
J9 Lejano, Raul and Climis Davos (2002),“Fair share: siting noxious facilites as a risk
distribution game under nontransferable utility,” J. of Environmental Economics and
Management 43:251-266.
J8 Lejano, Raul et al. (2002), “Rationality as social justice and the spatial-distributional
analysis of risk,” Environment and Planning C, 20:871-888.
J7 Lejano, Raul and Hiro Iseki (2001), “The question of environmental justice: The spatial
distribution of hazardous waste TSDs in Los Angeles,” J.of Urban Planning and Development
127(2):51.
J6 Lejano, Raul and Climis Davos (2001), “Siting noxious facilities with victim
compensation: n-person games under transferable utility,” Socio-Economic Planning
Sciences 35:109-124.
J5 Davos, Climis and Raul Lejano (2001), "Analytical perspectives of cooperative coastal
management," Journal of Environmental Management 62:123-130.
J4 Lejano, Raul and Climis Davos (1999), “Cooperative solutions for sustainable resource
management,” Environmental Management 24(2):167-175.
J3 Lejano, Raul, Pacita Ayala, and Erlinda Gonzales (1997), “Optimizing the mix of
strategies for the control of vehicular emissions,” Environmental Management 21(1):79-87.
J2 Lejano, Raul and Climis Davos (1995), “Cost allocation of multi-agency water resource
projects,” Water Resources Research 31(5):1387-1393.
J1 Lejano, Raul et al.(1992), “Assessing the benefits of water reuse,” Water Env't &
Technology 8:44-50.
BOOK CHAPTERS, BOOK REVIEWS, OTHERS
C12 Lejano, R. and H. Lian (2017). Institutional innovation and rural land reform in
China: The case of Chengdu, Lincoln Institute Policy Paper, Washington, D.C. C11 Lejano, R., Ingram, M. and H. Ingram (2017). "Narrative in the policy process," in
Colebatch, H. and R. Hoppe (eds.), Handbook of the Policy Process, Edward Elgar.
C10 Daskolia, M., G. Dettori, and R. Lejano (2016), "Urban digital storytelling," in Krasny and
Russ (eds.), Urban Environmental Education Review, Cornell Univ. Press.
C9 Lejano, R. and S.J. Park (2015). The autopoietic text, in Fischer et al. (eds.), Handbook of
Critical Policy Studies, Elgar Press, Cheltenham, UK, pp. 274-296.
C8 Lejano, M. B. R., & Qin, C. Z. (2013). Shapley, Lloyd S.(1923). The New Palgrave
Dictionary of Economics, 7.
C7 Lejano, Raul (2012), “Postpositivism and the policy process,” in Araral, Howlett, and
Ramesh (eds.) Routledge Handbook of Public Policy, Routledge, New York.
C6 Lejano, Raul (2008), "Book review: Democratic constitutional design and public
policy," Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis, 10(1):94-95.
C5 Lejano, Raul and Helen Ingram (2007), "How social networks enable adaptation to
system complexity and extreme weather events," in Pahl-Wostl, Kabat, and Moltgen
(eds.), Adaptive and Integrated Water Management: Coping with Complexity and Uncertainty,
Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
C4 Lejano, Raul (2007) “Peace games” in S. Ali (ed.), Peace Parks: Conservation and Conflict
Resolution, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
C3 Ingram, Helen and Raul Lejano (2007) "Transcending multiple ways of knowing water
resources in the United States," in Huitema and Meijerink (eds.), Water Transitions,
Elgar Press.
C2 Davos, Climis and Raul Lejano (2000), Environmental Evaluation, Online Textbook.
C1 Lejano, Raul (1998) “Ecology and the human equation,” in (Espiritu, Lejano, Peralta,
Ronquillo, and Salcedo) Current Issues, Katha Publishing, Quezon City.
BOOK REVIEWS ABOUT PUBLISHED WORKS Ulman, H. L. (2016). Book Review: The Power of Narrative in Environmental Networks. Journal of
Planning Education & Research 36(2): 267-269.
Elliott, M. (2014). A Review of “The Power of Narrative in Environmental Networks” Raul Lejano,
Mrill Ingram, and Helen Ingram.(2013). Journal of the American Planning Association,
80(2),190-191.
James, E. (2014). The Power of Narrative in Environmental Networks. Interdisciplinary Studies in
Literature and Environment, 21(2), 493-495.
Laberge, Y. (2014). Review: The Power of Narrative in Environmental Networks. Electronic Green
Journal, 1(37).
Miller, H. T. (2014). The power of narrative in environmental networks, by Raul Lejano,
Mrill Ingram, and Helen Ingram. Critical Policy Studies, 8(1),118-120.
Short, C. (2014). Lejano, Raul, Mrill Ingram and Helen Ingram (2013). The Power of Narrative in
Environmental Networks. International Journal of the Commons, 8(2),690-691.
Young, N. (2014). The Power of Narrative in Environmental Networks. by Raul Lejano,
Mrill Ingram, and Helen Ingram, 2013, Review of Policy Research, 31(3),253–255
Neeley, J. (2015). A Review of “The Power of Narrative in Environmental Networks” Lejano, Raul,
Mrill Ingram, and Helen Ingram, History: Reviews of New Books, 43(2),81-82.
PROFESSIONAL/TECHNICAL REPORTS P17 Lejano, R. et al. (2016), Interim Report: Storm Surge Risk Communication, World Bank.
P16 Lejano, R. et al. (2016), Sustainability Planning: City and Ecology in Hoi Ha, Hong Kong, NYU.
P15 Lejano, R. (2011), Consolidated Report: Resilience of Health Systems to Disasters,
Case Studies from the Western Pacific Region, WHO –World Health Organization.
P14 Lejano, R., Sablan, B., Bonje, A., and A. Dandiego (2010), Post-Flood Emergency Response
Review: Testing the Toolkit for Needs Assessment and Recovery Planning, WHO –World
Health Organization, Western Pacific Region.
P13 Lejano, R. et al. (2010), Policy Report 2010: Fertility Patterns Among the Urban Poor.
Social Ecology Research Center, Irvine.
P12 Lejano, R., Sablan, B., Bonje, A., and A. Dandiego (2010), Post-Flood Emergency Response
Review: Testing the Toolkit for Needs Assessment and Recovery Planning, WHO --WorldP12
Lejano, R., Sablan, B., Aldaba, J., and J. Dumlao (2010), Assessing the Impact of Disasters on
Health Systems: A Toolkit for Needs Assessment and Recovery Planning, WHO --World
Health Organization, Western Pacific Region.
P11 Lejano, Raul (2010), "Urban Environmental Quality: Perceptions and Measures" in
Encyclopedia of Environmental Health, Elsevier, Oxford.
P10 Sablan, B., Lejano, R., Dandiego, A., and A. Bonje (2010), Program Evaluation: Assessment of
the Coverage of Health Services Provided in Response to Typhoons Ondoy, Peping, and
Santi, WHO --World Health Organization, Western Pacific Region.
P9 Lejano, R., Sablan, B., and J. Aldaba (2009), Model Development: Risk Preparedness
Methodology, WHO --World Health Organization, Western Pacific Region.
P8 Lejano, R. et al. (2006), Participatory Action Research for Community Health in Southeast Los
Angeles, A Report to the First Five Commission, Huntington Park.
P7 Lejano, R. et al. (2004), Health Risk Assessment of the Chiquita Landfill, Irvine.
P6 Lejano, R. et al. (2002), Sonando en El Viento, Collaborative Environmental Health Research in
Springfield, MA, MIT, Cambridge, Mass.
P5 Lejano, R. et al. (2002), The Palawan Island Sustainability Mapping Project, Palawan
Council for Sustainable Development, MIT, Cambridge, Mass.
P4 Lejano, R. et al. (2000), Community-Based Waste Management Master Plan for Binan,
Laguna.
P3 Lejano, R. (1997), Master Plan and Rate Study, San Jose Water Reuse Program, San Jose.
P2 Lejano, R. et al. (1997), Draft Environmental Impact Report, Terminal Island Water Reuse
Project, Los Angeles.
P1 Lejano, R. et al. (1997), Water and Stormwater Master Plan for Cabanatuan City, Philippines,
United Nations Development Programme.
GRANT-FUNDED RESEARCH PROJECTS (2000-2012)
World Bank Global Facility for Dis. Red. & Recovery (Lejano, PI) $160K (ongoing)
Increasing resilience of coastal communities to climate change and storm surge.
Lincoln Land Institute (Lejano, PI), $31K (2017)
Evaluation of current experiment in land reform/privatization of peri-urban land in China.
NSF PIRE (Lejano, Co-I) $4.8M (2012-2016)
Eng., env., and human dimensions of low-energy technologies for treating water.
UCI Green Materials Initiative (Lejano, PI) $35K (2010-2012)
Novel methods for risk analysis of toxic substances: D-S and assumption set theory.
NOAA Sea Grant (Lejano, Co-PI) $190K (2007-2009)
BMPs for stormwater mgt.
RGC (Lejano, PI) $21K (2010-2012)
Ethics of urbanization: Post-materialism and traditional places in Hong Kong.
NUS AcRF Grant (Lejano, PI) $25K (2009-2011)
Book project: Narratives and ecological networks.
Climate Change Research: Carbon Trading in the Cal.-Baja Region ($40K, PI)
Policy evaluation of carbon trading regime under CDM program in Oaxaca, Mexico.
Industrial Archeology of Boston (BPHC, $45K, PI)
Mapping “historical brownfields” over a 200 year period, assessing contaminant residuals.
Stormwater Management Best Practices (NOAA, $210K, Co-PI)
Coupled systems model (hydrologic/spatial/economic) for optimizing runoff controls.
Narrative Analysis in Policy and Planning Theory (SSRC, $15K PI)
Book project on how narrative is a powerful lens for analyzing collective action.
Resilience of Health Systems to Disruption (WHO, $55K, PI)
Studies on how to protect health systems from extreme weather events and other disruptions.
Fertility in Low-Income Informal Settlements in Southeast Asia (NUS, $20K, Co-PI)
Ethnographic research of high fertility rates in low-income neighborhoods in Manila.
New Analytics for Combining Multiple Evidence in Risk Assessment ($29K, PI)
Development of assumption set and possibilistic methods for combining evidence.
Information-Based Environmental Regulations (RGC, $190K, Co-PI)
Comparative analysis of two IBER programs: PROPER (Indonesia) & Ecowatch (Philippines)
INVITED LECTURES/CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS (last 10 years) 6/20/17 "Narrative and Climate," Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, Singapore.
10/1/16 "Risk, Vulnerability, and the City," St. Peter's College, Oxford University.
8/5/16 "Remembering Shapley: Cooperative Games and their Relevance to Policy
Modeling," Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, Singapore.
6/11/16 "Introduction: Modes of Policy Analysis in the Asian Context," HKU-USC-IPPA
Conference on Public Policy, Hong Kong.
10/16/15 "Spatial Injustice and the Ethic of Care," Research Seminar, NYU Steinhardt School.
7/10/15 "The Contextual Turn in the Policy Sciences," 10th Annual Conference on Interpretive
Policy Analysis, Lille, France.
7/1/15 "The Narrative Properties of Ideology," with Jennifer Dodge, ICPP Annual
Conference, Milan.
5/25/15 "Policy Analysis: Lecture Series," Beijing Normal University, Beijing, PRC.
10/30/14 Ingram, H., Lejano, R., and M. Ingram (2014), participated in authors’ workshop,
“Does discourse matter? Discourse, power and institutions in the sustainability
transition,” in Freiburg, Germany, on October 30th-31st, 2014.
8/30/14 Ingram, H., Lejano, R., and M. Ingram (2014), From Discourse Coalitions to
Narrative-Networks: Uncovering Networks in the Deliberative Process, Presented
Paper at the Annual Conference of the American Political Science Association,
Washington, D.C., August 30, 2014.
8/7/14 Lejano, R. and D. Stokols (2014), Modeling Resilient Systems As Interlocking Forms
of Capital, Presented Paper at the 122nd National Conference of the American
Psychological Association, Washington, D.C. August 7, 2014.
4/8/14 Ingram, H., M. Ingram, and R. Lejano, Authors-Meet-Critics Panel: The Power of
Narrative in Environmental Networks (Cambridge: MIT Press), 2013. AAG Annual
Conference, Tampa, Florida, April 8, 2014.
7/4/14 Mukhtarov, F. and R. Lejano (2014), Policy Translation and the Problem of Context.
Powerpoint presentation at IPA Annual Conference, July 4, 2014, Wageningen, The
Netherlands.
12/4/13 "Climate, Narrative, and Action," Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines.
10/5/12 “Planning as Emplotment: Narratives of Sustainability,” Hong Kong University.
9/14/12 “Urban governance and the ethic of care,” Seoul National University.
7/10/12 “East vs. West: Distinguishing Institutional Types,” International Political Science
Association, Madrid.
7/7/12 “Hermeneutic Policy Analysis,” Interpretive Policy Analysis Conference, Tilburg.
7/5/12 “Policy Hermeneutics: Integrating Text and Context,” Interpretive Policy Analysis
Conference, Tilburg.
10/14/11 “Urban Phenomenology and the City as Emplotment” ACSP Conference, Salt Lake
City, Utah, with Anne Taufen Wessells.
6/23/2011 "The Hermeneutics of Water", Interpretive Policy Analysis Conference, Panel: Panel
10: Impact of interpretive methods on water governance, Wales, UK, Presentation,
Presenter & Author, with Ching Leong.
3/18/2011 "Cities of Care", Urban Affairs Association Annual Conference, Urban Affairs
Association, Panel: Urban Theory, New Orleans, Louisiana, Presentation.
3/12/2011 "Narrative networks and social-ecological systems", Resilience Conference, Resilience
Alliance, Tempe, Arizona, Presenter & Author, with Ingram, H. and Ingram, M.
10/20/2010 “Phenomenological Approaches to Social Ecological Research,” Spatial and
Contextual Analysis Working Group, University of California, Irvine.
3/10/2010 "New Urbanism and the Barrio", Urban Affairs Assocation, Annual Conference,
Honolulu, Hawaii.
12/19/2009 “Comparative Policy Analysis,” Tamkang University, Tsam Tsui, Taiwan.
12/18/2009 "Organizational Dimensions of Extreme Events: Conceptualizing Typhoon Ondoy",
Conference on Disaster Risk Prevention, National Tapei University, Taiwan.
12/17/2009 "Eastern vs. Western Policy Theory?", School of Public Administration, National
Taipei University, Taiwan.
12/15/2009 "Integrative Approaches to Policy Analysis", School of Public Administration,
National Taipei University.
7/15/2009 "Sustainable Urbanism", Kellogg College, Oxford University.
3/10/2009 "A Relational Model of Collective Action: From Theory to Institutional Design", Lee
Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, Singapore.
1/21/2009 "The Water-Energy Nexus", School of Environment and Natural Resources University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
9/17/2008 "Why Institutions Resist Incorporating Climate Change Scenarios Into Agency
Practice", UNESCO-IHP Symposium, UNESCO, Paris, Talk. Refereed.
6/15/2008 “Collective Action and Social Movements”, Hong Kong University, Department of
Public Administration.
7/15/2008 "Theorizing Collective Action", Ateneo de Manila University Philosophy Department,
Ateneo de Manila University, Lecure.
6/9/2008 "Environmental governance in a network age", Environmental Science Program, USC,
Lecture.
4/16/2008 "Learning and resilience", Resilience 2008, Resilience Center, Panel: Learning and
resilience, Stokholm, Panel presentation. Refereed.
6/28/2007 "Unflattening the World", Thesis 11 / Budhi Philosophy Conference, Chulalongkorn
University, Bangkok, Talk.
4/16/2007 "Building a Theory of Collective Action Upon an Ethic of Care", Oxford Said Business
School, Oxford.
9/5.2006 "Foucault and the reform of the regulatory state", Ateneo Philosphy Department,
Ateneo de Manila University, Lecture.
8/14.2006 "New institutional designs for intractable policy problems", Inst of Urban and
Regional Development, UC Berkeley.
AWARDS
• 2006 Recipient, Daniel Stokols Award for Interdisciplinary Research.
• 2006 - present, Editorial Board, Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture.
• 2006 - 2008, Board of Directors, Communities for a Better Environment.
• 2004 Prize, runner-up for best paper for "Polymorphic Structures of Risk Cognition," 2004 UC
Toxics Research and Teaching Program conference, San Diego, CA.
• 2002 - 2007, Research Fellow, Community-Based Resource Management Center.
• 2002 Horwood Prize for best paper in information systems technology for "The Boston
Industrial Archeology Mapping Project," awarded by URISA.
• Pacific Rim Fellowship (University of California, Los Angeles).
• Anthony Earle Fellowship (University of California, Berkeley).
RECENT / ONGOING PROFESSIONAL COLLABORATION
● Disaster Risk Reduction in the Western Pacific (WHO)
Partnership with the World Health Organization on creation of policy instruments for risk
preparedness in regional hospitals and other critical facilities, and post-disaster socio-
environmental impact assessments. Assessing vulnerability and resilience.
● Sustainable Development and Multi-Industry Clusters (DoA, NEDA)
Consultancy for the Philippine Department of Agriculture and National Economic
● Participatory Planning for Environmental Justice (CBE)
Joint design and implementation, with Communities for a Better Environment, of a participatory
action research initiatve to study and intervene in environmental justice issues.
● Urban Barrio Collaborative (CSUF)
Collaboration with the California State University Fullerton, El Centro, and the Kennedy
Foundation in developing pro-community urban movement in Santa Ana, CA.
OTHER
Associate Editorship of the following journals:
Environmental Science & Policy
Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning
Critical Policy Studies
International Journal of Urban Science