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Michael
Hibbard, Mentor
Planning, Public Policy and Mgmt.
Roseanna
Boyer, McNair Scholar
Michael Hibbard earned his Ph.D. from UCLA and joined the UO faculty
in 1980. Currently a professor of community and regional development
in the Department of Planning, Public Policy, and Management, Hibbard
is also director of the Institute for Policy Research and Innovation.
He is interested in sustainable regional development and the social
impacts of economic change, especially natural resource and agricultural
development, on small towns, indigenous communities, and rural regions
in developed countries. One of his current projects reflects those
interests economic development planning for Kake, Alaska, a Tlingit
community in southeast Alaska that has historically been dependent
on logging, fishing, and subsistence. Recent publications include
“Some Community Socio-Economic Benefits of Watershed Councils:
A Case Study from Oregon” (with S. Lurie), Journal of
Environmental Planning and Management (forthcoming); “Tribal
Sovereignty, the White Problem, and Reservation Planning,”
Journal of Planning History (2006); and “Doing It
for Themselves: Transformative Planning by Indigenous Peoples”
(with M. Lane), Journal of Planning Education and Research (2006).
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