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The University of Texas at Austin

Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs

William  Spelman

William Spelman

Professor of Public Affairs

Contact Info:
Phone: 512-471-8953
Email: spelman@mail.utexas.edu
Office: SRH 3.224




An urban policy specialist, William Spelman holds a Ph.D. in public policy from Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government. He has a background in operations research and evaluation and in local government law, administration, and finance. In May 1997 he was elected to the Austin City Council.

Formerly associated with the Police Executive Research Forum in Washington, D.C., Professor Spelman has developed and evaluated police programs aimed at apprehension, deterrence, and rehabilitation of repeat offenders and solution of neighborhood crime and disorder problems. Two of his programs, the Baltimore County (Maryland) Citizen Oriented Police Enforcement program and the Newport News (Virginia) Problem-Oriented Policing program, have been selected as finalists for the Ford Foundation's prestigious Innovations Awards.

His numerous publications focus on criminal justice policies, mainly in the areas of community crime prevention, repeat offenders, and neighborhood problem solving.

Education

Ph.D., M.P.P., John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

Current Positions

Previous Positions

Austin City Council (1997-2000); member, Police Executive Research Forum; Director, Texas Institute for Public Problem-Solving initiative on Community Policing.

“Growth, stability, and the urban portfolio,” Economic Development Quarterly, 20 (2006) 299-316; “Jobs or jails? The crime drop in Texas,” Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 24 (2005) 133-165; Criminal Incapacitation (Plenum Press, 1994); co-author, Problem Solving: Problem-oriented Policing in Newport News (Police Executive Research Forum, 1987); co-author, Dangerous Offenders: The Elusive Target of Justice (Harvard University Press, 1985); co-author, Calling the Police: Citizen Reporting of Serious Crime (Police Executive Research Forum, 1982).

Crime and Criminal Justice
Local Government
Public Administration and Management
Urban Policy

News

Spelman receives Journal of Policy Analysis and Management's 2005 awardOct. 27, 2005
Community policing goes global: Texas-Brazil exchange fosters new trend in law enforcementAug. 12, 2004

Courses

SemesterCourse
Spring 2009P A 397C - Advanced Empirical Methods for Policy Analysis: Program Evaluation
Spring 2009P A 397 - Introduction to Quantitative Analysis
Fall 2008P A 383C - Politics and Process: Policymaking in Cities
Fall 2008P A 384C - Advanced Management
Summer (1st Session) 2008P A 325 - Topics in Policy: Quantitative Foundations for Public Policy
Fall 2007P A 383C - Politics and Process
Fall 2007P A 390C - Advanced Research Methods
Summer (1st Session) 2007P A 325 - Topics in Policy: Quantitative Foundations for Public Policy
Spring 2007P A 384C - Advanced Management
Spring 2007P A 397C - Advanced Empirical Methods for Policy Analysis: Program Evaluation
Fall 2006P A 390C - Advanced Research Methods
Fall 2006P A 397 - Introduction to Quantitative Analysis
Spring 2006P A 397 - Introduction to Quantitative Analysis
Fall 2005P A 397C - Advanced Empirical Methods for Policy Analysis
Fall 2005P A 390C - Advanced Research Methods
Summer (2nd Session) 2005P A 384C - Public Administration and Management
Spring 2005P A 384C - Public Administration and Management