Itai Beeri
Social Sciences · Indiana University
Publications
73
Citations
1,512
Est. group size
—
Recurring co-author estimate
Active years
20
Publishing since 2007
Itai Beeri studies how local governments work and interact with the communities they serve, focusing on public policy, governance, and crisis management. Recent work examines how residents and policymakers respond to urban wildlife (such as wild boars in cities), the role of political trust during health crises like COVID-19, and cooperation between government and non-profit organizations to address community problems. The research often uses surveys and experiments to understand public attitudes toward local policies.
Publication activity has been steady and slightly growing over the last decade, with a recent peak of nine publications in 2025.
Generated by claude-opus-4-8 from public bibliographic data · Jul 11, 2026
- Gender Dimensions of Support for Local Policy: Resident, Policymaker, and Policy Gender
Policy Studies Journal · 2026
- Safety, trust, and the role of co-production in combating violence: local government-community relations in the Arab minority in Israel
Local Government Studies · 2026
- Political trust and health compliance during a health crisis: A systematic literature review from the COVID-19 pandemic
Social Science & Medicine · 2026
- Conflicting Emotions, Environmental and Political Factors in Support for Local Environmental Morality Policies: Evidence From an Experiment on Wild Boars in Haifa
Environmental Policy and Governance · 2026
- Emotions in the city? Emotional responses to urban wildlife and their association with urban reactive behavioral intentions during environmental and political crisis
Urban Studies · 2026
- The effect of human-wildlife interaction and political factors on support for local environmental morality policies: Thinning, trap–neuter–return and regulation against wild-animals’ feeders
City and Environment Interactions · 2025
- Anthropocentric or Biocentric? Socio-Cultural, Environmental, and Political Drivers of Urban Wildlife Signage Preferences and Sustainable Coexistence
Sustainability · 2025
- Who suffers the most? Wild boars, perceived harm, and local politics: Governance challenges in urban human-wildlife conflicts
Cities · 2025
- Fostering change: Using the co‐production of services by the state and non‐profits to combat violence within the Israeli Arab community
Australian Journal of Public Administration · 2025
- Emotions in the City? Emotional Responses to Urban Wildlife and Their Effect on Urban Reactive Behaviors During Environmental and Political Crisis: Experimental Evidence from Wild Boars in Haifa
Research Square · 2025
- Who gets the credit? Claiming political credit and avoiding blame in regional Inter-Municipal Cooperation
Public Policy and Administration · 2025
- The Role and Challenges of Regional Clusters in Israel: Advancing Collaborative Governance Amidst Centralized Tensions
2025
- ANTHROPOCENTRIC OR BIOCENTRIC? SOCIO-CULTURAL, ENVIRONMENTAL, AND POLITICAL DRIVERS OF URBAN WILDLIFE SIGNAGE PREFERENCES AND SUSTAINABLE COEXISTENCE
PEOPLE International Journal of Social Sciences · 2025
- The Public's Willingness to Pay More Local Taxes to Deal With Wild Animals in the City
Governance · 2025
- Urban conflict management, human‐wild animal interactions, local environmental governance and political participation
Public Administration Review · 2024
- Local Government Studies×5
- SSRN Electronic Journal×4
- The American Review of Public Administration×3
- Sustainability×3
- Policy Studies Journal×2
This profile was generated automatically from public scholarly data (OpenAlex). Group size and activity levels are estimates derived from co-authorship patterns.
Last updated Jul 11, 2026.
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