Civil Service Commission 1855-1991

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A01=Richard A. Chapman
Administrative Class
administrative reform history
Author_Richard A. Chapman
biography
British civil service
British governance evolution
bureau
Bureau Biography
Category=NHD
Civil Service
Civil Service Commissioners
Civil Service Examinations
Civil Service Recruitment
Civil Service Selection Board
commissioner
competitive examinations
CSD
Davies Committee
department
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eq_history
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first
FSB
Fulton Committee
Fulton Report
Halsey Report
home
Home civil service
institutional analysis of recruitment systems
John Hunt
Labour exchanges act
MacDonnell Commission
meritocracy in government
Modern Language
National Staff Side
Norman Hunt
northcote
Northcote Trevelyan Report
Old age pensions act
personnel selection methods
Public Administration
public sector recruitment
report
royal
Secretary Of State
trevelyan
Unified Civil Service
Victorian era
Whitehall Series
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780714653402
  • Weight: 730g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 2004
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Civil Service Commision was created in 1855 and became the key institution in the development of the British civil service. Its work was primarily the recruitment of civil servants by fair methods, treating all qualified applicants equally, and using open competitions wherever practicable. It was held in high esteem not only in the United Kingdom but also in the many other countries throughout the world which, in many places, modelled their methods of public service recruitment on its pioneering work. It continued until 1991, when most of its work was devolved to over 3,000 government departments and executive agencies.
This book describes the gestation, growth, development and eventual demise of the Commision and includes a number of in-depth case studies. Using source material such as official files, many only recently available for research, together with other records and evidence to official committees, the book provides a biography of an institution. It shows how the department was formally organised and there is a particular focus on how it actually worked on a day-to-day basis. With three in-depth chapters on the chronological development of the Commision and seven case studies of themes or issues that reveal methods of work and influences on its activities, this book uses file-based research more extensively than any other history of a British government department.
The Civil Service Commision, 1855-1991 reveals insights into civil service recruitment and makes a major original contribution to our understanding of the practice and politics of public administration.

Richard A. Chapman is Emeritus Professor of Politics in the Durham Business School. He previously taught at Carleton University, Canada and the universities of Leicester, Liverpool, Birmingham and Durham. He is foundation Academician of the Academy of Learned Societies for the Social Sciences. His previous books include Ethics in the British Civil Service (1988), The Treasury in Public Policy-Making (1997) and Leadership in the British Civil Service (1984)

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