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  <title><![CDATA[PhD Defense by Janille Smith-Colin]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p><em>&nbsp;</em></p>

<p><strong>School of Civil and Environmental Engineering</strong></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Ph.D. Thesis Defense Announcement</strong></p>

<p>Developing a Conceptual Framework and Building Blocks for Regional Collaboration in Performance-based Transportation Planning</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>By</strong></p>

<p>Janille Smith-Colin</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Advisor:</strong></p>

<p>Dr. Adjo Amekudzi-Kennedy ( CEE)</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Committee Members:</strong></p>

<p>Dr. Babaak Ashuri (CEE/Building Construction), Dr. Catherine Ross (CEE/CRP), Dr. Gordon Kingsley (Public Policy), Dr. Michael Meyer (WSP), and Dr. Jamie Fischer (SRTA/GRTA)</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Date &amp; Time:</strong> Thursday, December 14<sup>th</sup> , at 9:00 AM</p>

<p><strong>Location:</strong> Mason Building Conference Room 2119</p>

<p>The current national surface transportation legislation mandates performance-based transportation planning and emphasizes external</p>

<p>collaboration as a key conceptual component of a performance-based approach. These mandates have renewed the focus on</p>

<p>performance-collaboration activities as evidenced by ongoing efforts through the Every Day Counts Initiative, sponsored by the American</p>

<p>Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, and the U.S. Department of Transportation. Regional transportation collaboration</p>

<p>(RTC) is the deliberate, continuous, and sustained activity that takes place when transportation agency managers and officials work together</p>

<p>at a regional level to solve operational problems, improve system performance, and communicate better with one another. Although RTC was</p>

<p>first defined by the Federal Highway Administration in 2004, there is currently an absence of models in transportation literature and practice</p>

<p>designed to foster systematic improvements in performance through enhanced collaboration. Given the renewed emphasis on external</p>

<p>collaboration in performance-based transportation planning (PBTP), there is a need for conceptual and analytical frameworks that expand the</p>

<p>RTC paradigm, support RTC thinking and activity, and explicitly link performance and collaboration. This research offers guidance for the</p>

<p>systematic improvement of regional transportation collaboration, with the expressed intent of achieving higher performing outcomes.</p>

<p>The primary objective of the research is to develop a conceptual framework and building blocks for regional collaboration in a</p>

<p>performance-based transportation planning context. The research draws on literature including transportation performance management,</p>

<p>inter-organizational partnerships, and collaborative governance. This literature supports the investigation of performance and collaboration as</p>

<p>interlinked constructs, with performance measured in terms of effectiveness, reputation and efficiency, and collaboration measured in terms of</p>

<p>structure, governance, resources, tools/data, and strategies. Through a comparative analysis of regional safety coalitions, this research</p>

<p>investigates how the concept of RTC may be operationalized in practice; identifies gaps between theory and practice, and defines building</p>

<p>blocks and typologies for an effective performance-collaboration system.</p>

<p>The research uses an inductive or theory-first approach to refine, specify, and elaborate upon the regional transportation collaboration</p>

<p>literature by building typologies using a small number of cases. Nine regional safety coalitions within the state of Louisiana are investigated in</p>

<p>an iterative process that includes the separate and sequential analysis of datasets. The research first develops a conceptual understanding of</p>

<p>the performance-collaboration system through a literature review; collects and analyzes data on the regional safety coalitions using a survey,</p>

<p>semi-structured interviews and embedded case analysis; develops building blocks and typologies to characterize maturing levels of</p>

<p>performance and collaboration, and generates guidance for enhancing performance through improved collaboration.</p>

<p>Findings from the research offer guidance to support systematic performance enhancement through improved collaboration. The findings</p>

<p>indicate that common collaborative strategies can be identified and associated with different levels of performance within regional</p>

<p>transportation coalitions. The RTC conceptual framework offers a context-specific evaluative framework that may be used to operationalize the</p>

<p>interlinked constructs of performance and collaboration in PBTP. This research contributes to PBTP knowledge by integrating hitherto</p>

<p>disparate bodies of knowledge, in the literature, to support the systematic improvement of regional partnerships operating in a</p>

<p>performance-collaboration system. The research also contributes to the practice of PBTP by offering typologies, building blocks, and</p>

<p>implementation guidance to practitioners working to improve performance outcomes through collaborative partnerships.</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
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