PUBLICATIONS

Public Health and welfare Management

*Underlined name indicates student.

Peer Reviewed Articles

  1. Kim, Y., Lee, K., Oh, S.S., & Park, H. (2021). Effectiveness of emergent ad hoc coordination groups in public health emergencies. Risk Analysis. http://doi.org/10.1111/risa.13751

  2. Kim, Y., Oh, S.S., & Wang, C. (2020). From uncoordinated patchworks to a coordinated system: MERS-CoV to COVID-19 in Korea. American Review of Public Administration. 50(6-7), 736-742. https://doi.org/10.1177/0275074020942414

  3. Kim, Y., Oh, S.S., Ku, M., & Byeon, J.H., (2020). Interorganizational coordination and collaboration during the 2015 MERS-CoV response in Korea, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/dmp.2020.32

  4. Kim, Y., Kim, J.H., Oh, S.S., Kim, S-W, Ku, M., & Cha, J. (2019). Community analysis of a crisis response network. Social Science Computer Review. https://doi.org/10.1177/0894439319858679

  5. Kim, Y., Ku, M., & Oh, S.S. (2019). Public health emergency response coordination: Putting the plan into practice. Journal of Risk Research. https://doi.org/10.1080/13669877.2019.1628092

  6. Kim, Y., & Maroulis, S. (2018). Rethinking social welfare fraud from a complex adaptive systems perspective. Administration & Society, 50(1), 78-100.

  7. Kim, Y., Zhong, W., Jehn, M., & Walsh, L. (2015). Public risk perceptions and preventive behaviors during the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, 9(2), 145-154.

  8. Zhong, W., Kim, Y., & Jehn, M. (2013). Modeling dynamics of an influenza pandemic with heterogeneous coping behaviors: Case study of a 2009 H1N1 outbreak in Arizona. Computational and Mathematical Organizational Theory, 19(4), 622-645.

  9. Kim, Y., Zhong, W., & Chun, Y. (2013). Modeling sanction choices on fraudulent benefit exchanges in public service delivery. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 16(2)8, http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/16/2/8.html.

  10. Peck, L., Kim, Y., & Lucio, J. (2012). An empirical examination of validity in evaluation. American Journal of Evaluation, 33(3), 350-365.

  11. Kim, Y., Hahn, D., & Coursey, D. (2012). Decisions in research review boards: The roles of individual characteristics and communication media. Public Integrity, 14(2), 173-192.

  12. Kim, Y., Johnston, E., & Kang, H.S. (2011). A computational approach to managing performance dynamics of networked governance systems. Public Performance & Management Review, 34(4), 580-597.

  13. Jehn, M., Kim, Y., Bradley, B., & Lant, T. (2011). Community knowledge, risk perception and preparedness for the 2009 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic. Journal of Public Health Management and Practice, 17(5), 431-438.

  14. Kim, Y., Kim, S., & Kim, H. (2010). Transfer from a home and community-based long-term care program to a nursing home: The Ohio experience. International Journal of Public Policy, 5(2/3), 160-174.

  15. Desai, A., Greenbaum, R., & Kim, Y. (2009). Incorporating policy criteria in spatial analysis. American Review of Public Administration, 39(1), 23-42.

*Awarded the Health Policy Researcher of the Year by the Health Policy Institute of Ohio

  1. Kim, Y., & Xiao, N. (2008). FraudSim: Simulating fraud in a public delivery program. In L. Liu & J. Eck (Eds.), Artificial Crime Analysis Systems: Using Computer Simulations and Geographic Information Systems (pp. 319-338). Hershey, PA: IGI Global.

  2. Johnston, E., Kim, Y., & Ayyangar, M. (2007). Intending the unintended: The act of building agent-based models as a regular source of knowledge generation. Interdisciplinary Description of Complex Systems, 5(2), 81-91.

  3. Kim, Y. (2007). Using spatial analysis for monitoring fraud in a public delivery program. Social Science Computer Review, 25(3), 287-301.

Peer Reviewed Conference Proceedings

  1. Wang, C., Kim, Y., & Oh, S.S. (2020). Epidemic response coordination networks in “living documents.” Proceeding of 53th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS). (pp. 594-603). http://hdl.handle.net/10125/63812

  2. Kim, Y., Kim, J.H., Oh, S.S., Kim, S-W, & Ku, M. (2019). Subgroup analysis of an epidemic response network of organizations: 2015 MERS outbreak in Korea. Proceeding of 20th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research (pp. 177-185). New York, NY: ACM. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3325112.3325260

  3. Kim, Y., & McGraw, C. (2012). Use of agent-based modeling for e-Governance research. Proceeding of the 6th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance. DOI: 10.1145/2463728.2463850

  4. Zhong, W., & Kim, Y. (2010). Using model replication to improve the reliability of agent-based models. In S.K. Chai, J.J. Salerno, & P.L. Mabry (Eds.), Advances in Social Computing (pp. 118-127). New York: Springer.

Book Chapters

  1. Kim, Y. (2012). Simulating a fraud mechanism in public service delivery. In A. Desai (Ed.), Simulations for Policy Inquiry (pp. 121-138). New York: Springer.

  2. Zhong, W., Lant, T., Jehn, M., & Kim, Y. (2012). Pandemic influenza simulation with public avoidance behavior. In A. Desai (Ed.), Simulation for Policy Inquiry (pp. 181-201). New York: Springer.

  3. Catlaw, T., & Kim, Y. (2012). Ontologies of multiplicity and simulation: Possibilities for public affairs inquiry. In L. Gerrits, P. Marks, & F. Boons (Eds.). COMPACT I: Public Administration in Complexity (pp. 25-43). Litchfield Park, AZ: Emergent Publications.

  4. Johnston, E., Quigley, P., & Kim, Y. (2010). Crossing the border: Exploring the barriers for including complexity methods in evidence-based policy debates. In K. Martinas, D. Matika & A. Srbljinovic (Eds.). Complex Societal Dynamics: Security Challenges and Opportunities (pp. 13-22). Amsterdam: IOS Press.

Environmental Justice and Policy

*Underlined name indicates student.

Peer Reviewed Articles

  1. Stuhlmacher, M., Kim, Y., & Kim, J.E. (2022). The role of green space in Chicago’s gentrification. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127569

  2. Stuhlmacher, M., Georgescu, M., Turner II, B.L., Hu, Y., Goldblatt, R., Gupta, S., Frazier, A., Kim, Y., Balling, R.C., & Clinton, N. (2022). Are global cities homogenizing? An assessment of urban form and heat island implications. Cities.

  3. Stuhlmacher, M., Turner II, B.L., Frazier, A., Kim, Y., & Leffel, J. (2021). Institutional shifts and landscape change: The impact of the Período Especial on Cuba’s land system architecture. Journal of Land Use Science. https://doi.org/10.1080/1747423X.2020.1829119

  4. Campbell, H., Eckerd, A., & Kim, Y. (2021). Administration of community participation in small scale projects: Brownfield remediation in Los Angeles. Administration & Society. https://doi.org/10.1177/0095399720944064

  5. Ahn, J.J., Kim, Y., Lucio, J., Corley, E., & Bentley, M. (2020). Green spaces and heterogeneous social groups in the U.S. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1618866719306685

  6. Kim, Y., & Chun, Y. (2019). Revisiting environmental inequity in Southern California: Does environmental risk increase in ethnically homogeneous or mixed Communities? Urban Studies. 56(9), 1748-1767.

* Invited as a blog article in the London School of Economics US Politics and Policy on May 3, 2019: CLICK HERE

  1. Eckerd, A., Kim, Y., & Campbell, H. (2018). Gentrification and displacement: Modeling a complex urban process. Housing Policy Debate, 29(2), 273-295.

  2. Corley, E.A., Ahn, J.J., Kim, Y., Lucio, J., Rugland, E., & Molina, A. (2018). Conceptualizing lenses, dimensions, constructs and indicators for urban park quality. Environmental Justice, 11(6).

  3. Eckerd, A., Kim, Y., & Campbell, H. (2017). Community privilege and environmental justice: An agent-based analysis. Review of Policy Research, 34(2), 144-167.

  4. Kim, Y., & Verweij, S. (2016). Two effective causal paths that explain the adoption of US state environmental justice policies. Policy Sciences, 49(4), 505-523.

  5. Campbell, H., Kim, Y., & Eckerd, A. (2014). Local zoning and environmental justice: An agent-based analysis. Urban Affairs Review, 50(4), 521-552.

  6. Kim, Y., Campbell, H., & Eckerd, A. (2014). Residential choice constraints and environmental justice. Social Science Quarterly, 95(1), 40-56.

  7. Chun, Y., Kim, Y., & Campbell, H. (2012). Using Bayesian methods to control for spatial autocorrelation in environmental justice research: An illustration using Toxics Release Inventory data for a Sunbelt county. Journal of Urban Affairs, 34(4), 419-439.

  8. Eckerd, A., Campbell, H., & Kim, Y. (2012). Helping those like us or harming those unlike us: Illuminating social processes leading to environmental injustice. Environment and Planning B, 39(5), 945-964.

Peer Reviewed Conference Proceedings

13. Eckerd, A., Kim, Y., & Campbell, H. (2011). Using ABM to illuminate social processes leading to environmental injustice. Proceeding of Computational Social Science Society of America. http://computationalsocialscience.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Eckhard_EKC-CSSS.pdf