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The American Review of Public Administration
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Incorporating Policy Criteria in Spatial Analysis

Anand Desai

The Ohio State University, Columbus

Robert T. Greenbaum

The Ohio State University, Columbus

Yushim Kim

Arizona State University, Phoenix

Although spatial analysis and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) have become prevalent in the social and policy sciences, GIS and its mapmaking capability remains an underutilized tool among the decision support tools available to policy makers. Using a case study of Medicaid expenditure changes in Ohio, the authors demonstrate how spatial analysis and display can incorporate useful weights for policy makers. Through the use of dependence indices based upon the distributions of the affected recipients and service providers to weight the expenditures, the link between the effects of policy changes and the spatial distributions of these populations becomes clearer. The article argues that policy makers can be given a more appropriate picture of the potential local implications of statewide policy changes through the use of weights. Because of the power of maps to so starkly display these distributions, the article concludes with a caution that such tools should be used ethically with considered judgment.

Key Words: Geographic Information Systems • spatial analysis • visual display • Medicaid policy • location quotients

This version was published on January 1, 2009

The American Review of Public Administration, Vol. 39, No. 1, 23-42 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0275074007311387


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