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NEAL PEIRCE

Months ahead of the media pack in spotting local and regional innovations with national significance. Once a week.  

       
 

Neal Peirce is a pulse-taker of change in how America governs itself. His column has repeatedly broken fresh ground in identifying vital new trends state and local governments and the dynamics of federal/state/local relations. Time magazine called Peirce "the only national chronicler of grass-roots America." His weekly column, syndicated through The Washington Post Writers Group since 1978, appears in over 50 newspapers.

Peirce is a founder of the National Journal, and former political editor (1960-69) of Congressional Quarterly. He is the author of 12 books including "The Book of America: Inside Fifty States Today" (W.W. Norton & Co., 1983; Warner Books, 1984). His latest book is "Citistates: How Urban America Can Prosper in a Competitive World" (Seven Locks Press, 1993). "I'm trying," Peirce says, "to report the best - and worst - of what's happening in our states and communities, to cross-fertilize ideas, to show the amazing new forces at work at the local level, even as the federal government retrenches. Reporting and commentary from the grass roots are needed to give focus, and a national perspective, to what's happening." He is chairman of the Citistates Group, a network of journalists and speakers who believe that successful metropolitan regions are today's key to economic competitiveness and sustainable communities.

Since 1987, twenty-four "Peirce Reports" on the compelling issues for the future of their individual metropolitan regions have been sponsored by and appeared in such newspapers as The Arizona Republic, Seattle Times, Dallas Morning News, Philadelphia Inquirer, Raleigh News & Observer and St. Louis Post-Dispatch. A 2005-2006 series covered the entire New England states region. Peirce has received The Distinguished Urban Journalism Award from the National Urban Coalition in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the cause of America's cities. The American Political Science Association chose Peirce as recipient of the 1986 Carey McWilliams Award "to honor a major journalistic contribution to our understanding of politics."

Peirce was born in Philadelphia, and is a graduate of Princeton University. He and his wife Barbara, a textile and fashion designer, have three children. They live in Washington, D.C. At least two weeks of each month he travels his beat - America's 50 states.

For further information, please call Alan Shearer, editorial director, or James Hill, managing editor, at 800/879-9794

RECENT COLUMNS

FEBRUARY
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04: James Webb's Equity Challenge

JANUARY
28: Congress' Minimum Wage Vote
21: Could A Farm Bill Serve Us All?
14: A Possible Bipartisan Breakthrough?
07: Keeping Ford's Bipartisanship Alive

DECEMBER
24: Great New Towns: Gift To A Nation
17: How Do We Develop
10: The Other 'War' -- We Keep On Losing
03: Massive Road Congestion Looms

NOVEMBER
26: As We Add Millions
15: Voters Wisely Shun
12: A 100-Mile Thanksgiving
05: Stunning New Presciption

OCTOBER
29: Where Do We Put the Next 100 Million?
22: Reducing the Crime Rate
15: Can D.C.'s Torment Infect States, Cities Too?
08: Learning from the Spinach Scare
01: Heavy Mistrust of Elections' Honesty

SEPTEMBER
24: An Entire 'Green' Community
17: Salad Days for State Budgets
10: Breathing Hope Instead of Fear
03: Global Warming Challenge

AUGUST
27: Designing an Exit Strategy
13: Philadelphia's 'Green' Formula
06: Big Coal-Burning Plants



     

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