Public Management

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A01=Tom Entwistle
Affective Polarisation
Author_Tom Entwistle
Autonomy Promises
Bureaucracy
Business
Business Autonomy
Business Collaboration
Category=JP
Category=KJVN
citizen engagement strategies
empirical studies in public service delivery
Engagement Bonus
Entrepreneurial Orientation
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Functional Politicisation
governance structures
Leadership
Long Term Infrastructure Contracts
Management
Marketisation
Neutral Competence
organisational innovation
Organisations
performance measurement
PSM Literature
PSM Measurement
PSM Research
Public Administration
Public Management Research
Public Management Researchers
Public Private Hybrids
Public Private Partnerships
public sector reform
Purchaser Provider Splits
qualitative policy analysis
Quasi-market Reforms
Red Tape Research
Rovira Kaltwasser
UK Central Government
UK Local Government
UK's NHS
UK's Private Finance Initiative
UK’s NHS
UK’s Private Finance Initiative
Wicked Issues
Yardstick Competition

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367353742
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Public Management: A Research Overview provides a structured survey of the state of the art of public management research. Looking at the enduring themes of bureaucracy, autonomy, markets and collaboration, each chapter introduces key foundational studies before reviewing contemporary research. Although originally intended to maximise efficiency, work on bureaucracy points to the problems of red tape, contested accountabilities, performance management, merit and public service motivation. Autonomy research asks whether reforms intended to free subservient agencies from red tape and political interference have delivered the goods. Are autonomous service managers more focused on the needs of citizen-consumers and more entrepreneurial in their appetite for innovation? Marketisation reforms take a further step away from bureaucratic forms of control by exposing public services to market forces of one form or another. Competitive contracting and privatisation put public services into real markets while quasi-markets and yardstick competition try to recreate these pressures without private ownership. Perhaps reacting to the fragmentation unleashed by unbundling and marketisation, collaboration promises to deliver improvement through voluntary processes of negotiation and exchange. Vertical forms of collaboration between different levels of government, or between governments and citizens, promise a better match between policies and problems. Lateral collaboration between agencies working at the same level are intended to tackle the so-called wicked issues that fall between jurisdictions or else to share services and unlock economies of scale. The book concludes by considering the new challenges facing public management from global warming to the rise of populism and affective polarisation.

Drawing on evidence from across the world, the book will speak to all those studying and practising public management.

Tom Entwistle is Professor of Public Policy and Management at Cardiff University, UK.

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