



Dr. Paul Culhane
Public Administration, Public Policy, Environmental Politics
Professor Culhane received his Ph.D. degree from Northwestern University in 1977, an M.S. degree in foreign service from Georgetown University, and an B.A. degree from the University of Notre Dame. He taught at the University of Houston (1973-80) and Northwestern University (1981-86) and was a research scientist at the Institute of Ecology (1980-81). His research specialties include public organization theory, interest group politics, and environmental policy, especially environmental impact assessment and public lands management.
"The Strategies and Tactics of Interest Groups: The Case of the Environmental and Energy Policy Arena," (with Lettie McSpadden) Southeastern Political Review, 1999.
Public Lands Politics, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981.
Forecasts and Environmental Decision-Making (with H. P. Friesema and J. Beecher), Westview Press, 1987.
"Post-EIS Environmental Auditing," Environmental Professional, 1993.
"NEPA's Impacts on Federal Agencies, Anticipated and Unanticipated," Environmental Law, 1990.
"Heading 'Em Off at the Pass: MX and the Public Lands Subgovernment," in Federal Lands Policy, Philip Foss (Ed.), Greenwood Press, 1987.
"State-of-the-Art Science and Environmental Assessments: The Case of Acid Deposition" (with Thomas Armentano and H. Paul Friesema), Environmental Management, 1985.
"Sagebrush Rebels in Office" in Environmental Policy in the 1980's, Norman Vig and Michael Kraft (Eds.), Congressional Quarterly Press, 1984.
"Natural Resources Policy: Procedural Change and Substantive Environmentalism" in Nationalizing Government, Theodore Lowi and Alan Stone (Eds.), Sage, 1978.