Site refresh

The Affair to Remember blog has received a design and structural backend refresh! I updated the blog templates to the latest version being used by all of the other Humphrey blogs, to make sure all of the blogs are easy to maintain once I leave our fine institute.

This summer, following graduation, I have been working for the Dean under the supervision of Will Bear to strengthen the blog project and get it on a sure footing for my departure at the end of the summer. So far I have redesigned and relaunched Smart Politics with HHH post-doc Eric Ostermeier and the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance, revamped the Humphrey blog digest as well as most of the other center blogs, and brought Prof. Jerry Zhao's "Fiscal Issues and Geeky Stuff" to the UThink system from it's previous home at Blogger.

It's been a great opportunity for me to work with a lot of people at the Institute across policy areas and from all generations. Next up: launching a blog called "Regionalities" with the State and Local Policy Program and collaborating with the Public and Nonprofit Leadership Center to create a blog with them. I will also be working with IT and Communications to integrate the blog content with the official Humphrey website, which will help better position the blog content as well as reduce the effort needed to keep the "official" website up-to-date.

If you're interested how the blog project began, how it has been executed, and where it is heading in the future, please check out my professional paper on the subject. You can find a PDF of my paper at the Humphrey blog digest on its About page.

PASA's "An Affair to Remember" blog was the first public blog created as a pilot for the project, and I am happy to see that the 2008 executive board has really taken it and run with it. I hope it works as a great resource for students for years to come.

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Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs
The views and opinions expressed in this page are strictly those of the page author. The contents of this page have not been reviewed or approved by the University of Minnesota.
The views and opinions expressed in this page are strictly those of the page author. The contents of this page have not been reviewed or approved by the University of Minnesota.