Publications
(listed in reverse chronological order by date of publication - see PDF copy for in-progress works)
Refereed Journal Articles
13. Greenleaf, H., P. Bitterman, C. Koliba, and S. Hurley. 2024. Maintaining Green Stormwater Infrastructure in Urban and Rural Vermont: Municipal Maintenance Capacity, Aesthetics, and Connections to Stormwater Policy. Sustainable Water in the Built Environment. doi.org/10.1061/JSWBAY.SWENG-570.
12. Bitterman, P., and D.G. Webster. 2024. The Collaborative Policy Modeling Paradox: Perceptions of Water Quality Modeling in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed. Socio-Environmental Systems Modelling. doi.org/10.18174/sesmo.18677
11. Lim, T.C., P. Glynn, G. Shenk, P. Bitterman, J. Guillaume, J. Little, and D.G. Webster. 2023. Recognizing political influences in participatory social-ecological systems modeling. Socio-Environmental Systems Modelling. doi.org/10.18174/sesmo.18509.
10. Bitterman, P., C. Koliba, and A. Singer. 2023. A network perspective on multi-scale water governance in the Lake Champlain Basin, Vermont. Ecology and Society. dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-14036-280144.
9. Bitterman, P., and C. Koliba. 2023. Engagement in Water Governance Action Situations in the Lake Champlain Basin. PLOS ONE. dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282797.
8. Zia, A., A.W. Schroth, J.S. Hecht, P. Isles, P. Clemins, S. Turnbull, P. Bitterman, Y. Tsai, I. Mohammed, G. Bucini, E.M.B. Doran, C. Koliba, A. Bomblies, B. Beckage, J. Winter, C. Adair, D.M. Rizzo, B. Gibson, G. Pinder. 2022. Climate change-legacy phosphorus synergy hinders lake response to aggressive water policy targets. Earth’s Future. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021EF002234.
7. Bitterman P., C. Koliba. 2020. Modeling Alternative Collaborative Governance Network Designs: An Agent-Based Model of Water Governance in the Lake Champlain Basin, Vermont. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory. doi: 10.1093/jopart/muaa013.
6. Bitterman P., D.A. Bennett, S. Secchi. 2019. Constraints on Farmer Adaptability in the Iowa-Cedar River Basin. Environmental Science & Policy. doi: 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.11.004
5. Carrel, Margaret, C. Zhao, D. Thapaliya, P. Bitterman, A. E. Kates, B. M. Hanson, T. C. Smith. 2017. Assessing the potential for raw meat to influence human colonization with Staphylococcus aureus. Scientific Reports. doi: 10.1038/s41598-017-11423-6.
4. van Riper, C. J., A. C. Landon, S. Kidd, P. Bitterman, L. A. Fitzgerald, E. F. Granek, S. Ibarra, D. Iwaniec, C. M. Raymond, and D. Toledo. 2017. Incorporating socio-cultural phenomena into ecosystem service valuation: The importance of critical pluralism. BioScience. doi: 10.1093/biosci/biw170.
3. Bitterman, P., E. Tate, K. J. Van Meter, and N. B. Basu. 2016. Water security and rainwater harvesting: A conceptual framework and candidate indicators. Applied Geography 76: 75-84. doi: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2016.09.013.
2. Bitterman, P., and D. A. Bennett. 2016. Constructing stability landscapes to identify alternative states in coupled social-ecological agent-based models. Ecology and Society 21(3): 21. doi: 10.5751/ES-08677-210321.
1. Carrel, M., and P. Bitterman. 2015. Personal Belief Exemptions to Vaccination in California: A Spatial Analysis. Pediatrics 136(1): 80-88. doi: 10.1542/peds.2015-0831.
Books
Shepard, R., P. Bitterman, J.C. Archer, and F. Shelley. 2024. Atlas of Iowa. University of Iowa Press. ISBN 9781609389598. doi.org/10.2307/jj.18654583.
Book Chapters
1. Bitterman, P., and D. A. Bennett. 2018. Leveraging Coupled Agent-Based Models to Explore the Resilience of Tightly-Coupled Land Use Systems. In: Perez L., Kim EK., Sengupta R. (eds) Agent-Based Models and Complexity Science in the Age of Geospatial Big Data. Advances in Geographic Information Science. Springer, Cham. doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-65993-0_2