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Recent News

Dean Shapiro: Another Blow to Regulatory Benefit-Cost Analysis

Dean Shapiro: Another Blow to Regulatory Benefit-Cost Analysis

Stuart Shapiro argues that the Trump Administration’s new OIRA memo accelerates deregulation by sidelining rigorous benefit-cost analysis and elevating presidential preferences over economic evidence. He concludes that formally directing agencies to ignore analysis in key situations may signal the end of a decades-long norm that regulatory decisions should be grounded in objective economic evaluation.

Using Counter-Mapping to Promote Resilience in Urban Planning

Using Counter-Mapping to Promote Resilience in Urban Planning

Counter-mapping is discussed as an important tool for community-driven urban planning and urban design that leverages the preservation of local knowledge and cultural heritage, and challenges the hegemony of design promoted by platform urbanism

Ceu Cirne-Neves, MPA, FACHE Receives Lifetime Achievement Award

Ceu Cirne-Neves, MPA, FACHE Receives Lifetime Achievement Award

The Bloustein School is proud to share that colleague Céu Cirne-Neves, MPA, FACHE has been honored with the inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award from the American College of Healthcare Executives New Jersey Chapter (ACHE-NJ). The award was presented at the chapter’s Annual Meeting and Awards Ceremony on December 4, 2025, at the Hyatt Regency in New Brunswick.

NJSPL: The Healthcare Affordability Crisis in NJ and Nationally

NJSPL: The Healthcare Affordability Crisis in NJ and Nationally

Nationally, and in New Jersey, healthcare spending accounts for 1 in 5 dollars of gross domestic product, with hospital care representing the largest category of healthcare spending. In order to address this ongoing affordability crisis, researchers recommend that the incoming gubernatorial administration continue to build on the work of the New Jersey Health Care Afforability, Responsibility, and Transparency (HART) Program.

Wolff and Lewis Pen Chapter on PSD and Trauma-Informed Care

Wolff and Lewis Pen Chapter on PSD and Trauma-Informed Care

This chapter provides a blueprint that recognizes the reluctance of the correctional system to address trauma, the lack of funding and staffing expertise to support and sustain a therapeutically sensible response to trauma, and the superseding public health imperative to treat and rehabilitate trauma in cost-effective ways.

Community and Belonging Initiatives

The school is home to individuals from many cultures, races, nationalities, genders, identities, and life experiences and with different beliefs and values. The Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy values community and belonging and aims to improve and grow these efforts strategically by managing and assessing performance.

April 15, 2026: Health Management Perspectives Lecture

Maggie McCullough is the founder and CEO of PolicyMap, a leading geospatial data and mapping platform advancing the use of social determinants of health (SDOH) data to drive equitable health outcomes. Join the Health Administration Program’s Lecture Series for a virtual discussion on “Why Tracking Health Equity Data Still Matters.” Learn more.

Student Spotlight: Katherine Lang, Public Health ’26

“I always wanted to be in a career where I felt like I was genuinely helping others. After my sophomore year, I realized that I wanted to be involved in the healthcare sphere but I didn’t necessarily want to practice medicine. I switched my major to public health, picked up a minor in business administration, and learned about the seemingly hundreds of career paths outside of medicine that I had never considered before. Eventually I hope to combine my background in public health with a law degree and work in healthcare administration.”