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Public Sector Management
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Public Sector Management
Theory, Critique and Practice


May 1994 | 320 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Drawing together key contributions from the field, this innovative volume provides a broad-ranging overview of both the theory and the practice of public service management. The editors outline the social, political, and economic contexts in which management has emerged as a crucial issue in the public sector of modern democratic countries. Introducing three major theories, issues, and concepts involved in defining and understanding public sector management, this book analyzes some of the key values underpinning the idea of the public domain and examines some of the techniques and strategies which have been proposed to improve management for public services. This collection of thought-provoking articles will be essential reading for all graduate students studying public sector management, as well as practicing public sector managers--particularly those in health care, local government, and the civil service. "A course reader for the Open University MBA course on Managing Public Services, this book draws together key contributions to the field and provides a broad-ranging overview of both the theory and practice of public service management. . . . It analyzes some of the key values underpinning the idea of the public domain and examines some of the main challenges in terms of particular strategies, techniques and competences that have been proposed to improve management for public services. A book of particular interest to those studying health care, local government, and the civil service." --International Review of Administrative Sciences "The book makes excellent reading." --Management & Labour Studies

 
PART ONE: THE CONTEXT OF IDEAS
 
Introduction
Michael Oakeshott
Rationalism in Politics
Michel Foucault
Governmentality
John Gray
Limited Government
H Simon
The Criterion of Efficiency
John Stewart and Stewart Ranson
Management in the Public Domain
Leonard Wrigley and David McKevitt
Professional Ethics, Government Agenda and Differential Information
 
PART TWO: CONTROL AND IMPLEMENTATION
 
Introduction
Richard Rose
Charges as Contested Signals
Andrew Dunsire, Keith Hartley and David Parker
Organizational Status and Performance
Summary of the Findings

 
Joseph M Jacob
Lawyers Go to Hospital
Anthony Hopwood
Accounting and the Pursuit of Efficiency
Vicki Eaton Baier, James G March and Harald S[oe together]tren
Implementation and Ambiguity
L Challis et al
Investigating Policy Coordination
Issues and Hypotheses

 
 
PART THREE: RESPONSIVENESS AND PERFORMANCE
 
Introduction
Patricia Day and Rudolf Klein
Interpretations and Implications
Neil Carter
Performance Indicators
`Backseat Driving' or `Hands Off' Control

 
Rosabeth Moss Kanter and David V Summers
Doing Well While Doing Good
Dilemmas of Performance Measurement in Nonprofit Organizations and the Need for a Multiple-Constituency Approach

 
Margareta Bertilsson
The Welfare State, the Professions and Citizens
Jenny Potter
Consumerism and the Public Sector
How Well Does the Coat Fit?

 
V Lynn Meek
Organizational Culture
Origins and Weaknesses

 
Hans Weggemans
Personnel and Public Management

Book is well presented and highlights interesting claims regarding public sector management. Although it looks at the theory and critiques it it would of been nice to see some recommendations of sector leading practice

Mrs Laura Castles
Management, Torfaen Training
July 12, 2016