Performing the State

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accountability frameworks
Alison Gable
Amber Chambers
Bob Lingard
Broader Population Health
Category=JBF
Category=JHB
Category=JNF
Child Protection System
child welfare outcomes
Clare Tilbury
Cosmo Howard
educational policy analysis
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Esther Willing
Family Support
Headline Indicators
health service evaluation
Health Target
Immunisation Coverage
Immunisation Services
Improve Health System Performance
Improve Immunisation Coverage
Michele Foster
Michelle Denton
MLs
NAPLAN Data
NAPLAN Outcome
NAPLAN Performance
NAPLAN Test
Out-of Home Care
Patrick Le Gales
Performance Data
performance governance
Performance Measurement
Performance Numbers
PHCO
Policy Instrument Approach
Policy Instrument Choices
Policy Studies
Population Health Outcomes
professional service delivery
public administration
public sector governance
Public Sector Performance Measurement
public services
quantitative policy tools
socio-political performance measurement practices
Statutory Child Protection
Zealand Health System

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138104587
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Performance measurement is now a key management tool used by government to assess and enhance public services. It is also used as a tool for public sector transparency and accountability. Despite these noble objectives, performance measurement can also generate counterproductive and sometimes paradoxical outcomes. This book innovatively conceptualises performance measurement as a ‘policy instrument’. Such an approach necessarily invites careful and critical examination of instances of the formation, application and contestation of particular performance measurement regimes, the tools used to measure performance, the way in which performance data is produced and used, and the complex dynamics between professionals, managers and service users that arise from these practices. The book provides detailed empirical examples of performance measurement in the delivery of health, schooling and child welfare services, as well as the problematics of assessing national wellbeing. Instead of a form of scientific and rational management, performance measurement is revealed as an intrinsically contested, socio-politically charged and value laden practice. The book concludes that to succeed in delivering authentic performance improvements public sector managers must be aware of these complex, paradoxical dynamics and the circumstances that make performance measurement perform. This book was originally published as a special issue of Policy Studies.

Paul Henman is Associate Professor of Digital Sociology and Social Policy at the University of Queensland, Australia. His research examines the nexus between government policy, public administration and information technologies. He is the author of Governing Electronically: e-government and the reconfiguration of policy, public administration and power (2010). Alison Gable is an Honorary Research Fellow in the Schools of Education and Social Science, University of Queensland, Australia. Her research and practice sits at the intersection of data, professions, education policy, and reform.