Evaluation

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A01=Jan-Eric Furubo
Algemene Rekenkamer
auditor
Auditor General
Author_Jan-Eric Furubo
Barbier Jean-Claude
Category=JPP
CHRC
Commons Public Administration Select Committee
Dahler-Larsen Peter
Danish Evaluation Institute
Dg Employment
Eliadis Pearl
employment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
european
European Employment Strategy
evaluative
Evaluative Information
evaluator influence in governance
Follow
Furubo Jan-Eric
game
general
Government Bodies
Gray Andrew
Holds
Horber-Papazian Katia
information
institutional self-interest
Jacob Steve
Jenkins Bill
Jeremy Lonsdale
Jonathan D. Breul
Karlsson Vestman Ove
office
OMB Examiner
Part Assessment
Part Process
Part Rating
Participatory Evaluation
Pearl Eliadis
Peer Evaluation
Peer Evaluation Systems
Performance Audit
performance audit techniques
power
power dynamics research
program assessment methods
Public Administration
public policy analysis
Ray C. Rist
Sandra Speer
social science evaluation
State Audit Institutions
strategy
Supreme Audit Institutions
Transnational Peer
UK House
Vet Provider

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138509856
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Evaluation has come of age. Today most social and political observers would have difficulty imagining a society where evaluation is not a fixture of daily life, from individual programs to local authorities to parliamentary committees. While university researchers, grant makers and public servants may think there are too many types of evaluation, rankings and reviews, evaluation is nonetheless viewed positively by the public. It is perceived as a tool for improvement and evaluators are seen as dedicated to using their knowledge for the benefit of society.

The book examines the degree to which evaluators seek power for their own interests. This perspective is based on a simple assumption: If you are in possession of an asset that can give you power, why not use it for your own interests? Can we really trust evaluation to be a force for the good? To what degree can we talk about self-interest in evaluation, and is this self-interest something that contradicts other interests such as "the benefit of society?" Such questions and others are addressed in this brilliant, innovative, international collection of pioneering contributions.

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