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We live in a world governed by states whose enduring importance and
domination of contemporary politics has been strikingly underlined
by their renewed activism in the face of a global economic crisis.
Yet the very nature of states remains deeply contested, with a
range of competing theories offering very different views of how
they actually do or should operate. In the past this competition
has lead to deep ideological conflict - and even to war. In this
major new work, John S. Dryzek and Patrick Dunleavy provide a
broad-ranging assessment of classical and contemporary theories of
the state, focusing primarily on the democratic state form that has
come to dominate modern politics. The authors' starting point is
the classical theories of the state: pluralism, elite theory,
Marxism and market liberalism. They then turn to the contemporary
forms of pluralism prevalent in political science, systematically
exploring how they address central issues, such as networked
governance, globalization, and changing patterns of electoral and
identity politics. They proceed to analyse a range of key
contemporary critiques of modern states and democracy that have
emerged from feminism, environmentalism, neo-conservatism and
post-modernism. Each approach is carefully introduced and analysed
as far as possible in relation to a common set of issues and
headings. Theories of the Democratic State takes the reader
straight to the heart of contemporary issues and debates and, in
the process, provides a challenging and distinctive introduction to
and reassessment of contemporary political science.
Authoring a PhD involves having creative ideas, working out how to organize them, writing up from plans, upgrading text, and finishing it speedily and to a good standard. It also involves being examined and getting work published. This book provides a huge range of ideas and suggestions to help PhD candidates cope with both the intellectual issues involved and the practical difficulties of organizing their work effectively.
The 41st Annual Conference of the Academy of International Business
UK and Ireland Chapter was held at The University of York in April
2014. This book contains records of keynote speeches and special
session on key topics, as well as selection of some of the best
papers presented at the conference.
This is an invaluable guide to better research communication within
and beyond academia. With many years of research experience, the
authors provide scholars and scientists with systematic advice on
how to ensure their research reaches its potential, and grows the
recognition, influence, practical application and public
understanding of science and scholarship. It begins by examining
how citations work and evaluating the different measures of
academic influence, from legacy bibliometric systems to altmetrics
and digital metrics. Subsequent chapters show readers how to craft
impactful journal articles, work effectively with co-authors,
create a portfolio of publications and build a digital strategy
that promotes knowledge exchange. Checklists help readers decide
how and in what format to publish, enabling them to get their
research in front of the right people. Throughout, the authors
illustrate impact with data drawn from a wide range of disciplines.
Maximizing the Impacts of Academic Research is ideal for PhD
students and early career researchers taking their first steps into
academic research, experienced researchers mentoring the next
generation of scholars and scientists and established academics
looking to systematically review and upgrade their existing impact
practices.
First published in 1991. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
This book offers the first accessible, systematic study of the five
schools of thought that dominate modern political science in the
West. The authors give an account of the intellectual origins and
the methodology of pluralism, the New Right, elitism, Marxism, and
neo-pluralism concentrating on the models of political
mobilization, state organization, and crisis that are posited by
each. Dunleavy and O'Leary end with a strikingly original
evaluation of rival analyses of the state, providing a new frame of
reference for the study of political controversy in liberal
democracies.
Public choice approaches have revolutionized contemporary political
science, particularly in the United States. In addition, because
public choice methods are closely associated with new right
political movements, their impact on practical politics has also
been considerable, for example, in encouraging the adoption of
privatization and bureaucratic competition.
The 41st Annual Conference of the Academy of International Business
UK and Ireland Chapter was held at The University of York in April
2014. This book contains records of keynote speeches and special
session on key topics, as well as selection of some of the best
papers presented at the conference.
'Carrera and Dunleavy provide a crystal clear and comprehensive
account of the complex issues involved in how best to improve the
productivity of government services. They offer a nuanced but
powerful explanation of productivity puzzles, conundrums and
dilemmas in the public sector. But they also offer solutions to
many of these problems. Finally, I have found a text on public
economics that makes sense, gives genuine management insights and
offers real suggestions to practitioners as to what to do next.' -
Barry Quirk, Chief Executive, London Borough of Lewisham, UK'This
book presents a welcome and sobering analysis of productivity
performance in UK central government - a subject that has received
remarkably little serious academic attention up to now, in spite of
decades of general commentary on managerialism.' - Christopher
Hood, All Souls College, UK 'Leandro Carrera and Patrick Dunleavy
have performed an amazing feat in this book through their rigorous
examination of a thorny topic that has dogged pundits and academics
alike. Just how efficient is government and how well does it do its
job? As a result of an impressive - but accessible - set of data
analyses, the authors make an authoritative attack on the
proponents of the New Public Management, and offer some clear
recommendations for reform based on better use of new technology.'
- Peter John, University College London, UK Productivity is
essentially the ratio of an organization's outputs divided by its
inputs. For many years it was treated as always being static in
government agencies. In fact productivity in government services
should be rising rapidly as a result of digital changes and new
management approaches, and it has done so in some agencies.
However, Dunleavy and Carrera show for the first time how complex
are the factors affecting productivity growth in government
organizations - especially management practices, use of IT,
organizational culture, strategic mis-decisions and political and
policy churn. With government budgets under stress in many
countries, this pioneering book shows academics, analysts and
officials how to measure outputs and productivity in detail; how to
cope with problems of quality variations; and how to achieve
year-on-year, sustainable improvements in the efficiency of
government services.
'Carrera and Dunleavy provide a crystal clear and comprehensive
account of the complex issues involved in how best to improve the
productivity of government services. They offer a nuanced but
powerful explanation of productivity puzzles, conundrums and
dilemmas in the public sector. But they also offer solutions to
many of these problems. Finally, I have found a text on public
economics that makes sense, gives genuine management insights and
offers real suggestions to practitioners as to what to do next.' -
Barry Quirk, Chief Executive, London Borough of Lewisham, UK'This
book presents a welcome and sobering analysis of productivity
performance in UK central government - a subject that has received
remarkably little serious academic attention up to now, in spite of
decades of general commentary on managerialism.' - Christopher
Hood, All Souls College, UK 'Leandro Carrera and Patrick Dunleavy
have performed an amazing feat in this book through their rigorous
examination of a thorny topic that has dogged pundits and academics
alike. Just how efficient is government and how well does it do its
job? As a result of an impressive - but accessible - set of data
analyses, the authors make an authoritative attack on the
proponents of the New Public Management, and offer some clear
recommendations for reform based on better use of new technology.'
- Peter John, University College London, UK Productivity is
essentially the ratio of an organization's outputs divided by its
inputs. For many years it was treated as always being static in
government agencies. In fact productivity in government services
should be rising rapidly as a result of digital changes and new
management approaches, and it has done so in some agencies.
However, Dunleavy and Carrera show for the first time how complex
are the factors affecting productivity growth in government
organizations - especially management practices, use of IT,
organizational culture, strategic mis-decisions and political and
policy churn. With government budgets under stress in many
countries, this pioneering book shows academics, analysts and
officials how to measure outputs and productivity in detail; how to
cope with problems of quality variations; and how to achieve
year-on-year, sustainable improvements in the efficiency of
government services.
Government information systems are big business (costing over 1 per
cent of GDP a year). They are critical to all aspects of public
policy and governmental operations. Governments spend billions on
them - for instance, the UK alone commits GBP14 billion a year to
public sector IT operations. Yet governments do not generally
develop or run their own systems, instead relying on private sector
computer services providers to run large, long-run contracts to
provide IT. Some of the biggest companies in the world (IBM, EDS,
Lockheed Martin, etc) have made this a core market. The book shows
how governments in some countries (the USA, Canada and Netherlands)
have maintained much more effective policies than others (in the
UK, Japan and Australia). It shows how public managers need to
retain and develop their own IT expertise and to carefully maintain
well-contested markets if they are to deliver value for money in
their dealings with the very powerful global IT industry. This book
describes how a critical aspect of the modern state is managed, or
in some cases mismanaged. It will be vital reading for public
managers, IT professionals, and business executives alike, as well
as for students of modern government, business, and information
studies.
Authoring a Ph.D. Thesis involves having creative ideas, working out how to organize them, writing up from plans, upgrading text, and finishing it speedily and to a good standard. It also involves being examined and getting work published. This book provides a huge range of ideas and suggestions to help PhD candidates cope with both the intellectual issues involved and the practical difficulties of organizing their work effectively.
Government information systems are big business (costing over 1 per
cent of GDP a year). They are critical to all aspects of public
policy and governmental operations. Governments spend billions on
them - for instance, the UK alone commits L14 billion a year to
public sector IT operations.
Yet governments do not generally develop or run their own systems,
instead relying on private sector computer services providers to
run large, long-run contracts to provide IT. Some of the biggest
companies in the world (IBM, EDS, Lockheed Martin, etc) have made
this a core market. The book shows how governments in some
countries (the USA, Canada and Netherlands) have maintained much
more effective policies than others (in the UK, Japan and
Australia). It shows how public managers need to retain and develop
their own IT expertise and to carefully maintain well-contested
markets if they are to deliver value for money in their dealings
with the very powerful global IT industry.
This book describes how a critical aspect of the modern state is
managed, or in some cases mismanaged. It will be vital reading for
public managers, IT professionals, and business executives alike,
as well as for students of modern government, business, and
information studies.
The impact agenda is set to shape the way in which social
scientists prioritise the work they choose to pursue, the research
methods they use and how they publish their findings over the
coming decade, but how much is currently known about how social
science research has made a mark on society? Based on a three year
research project studying the impact of 360 UK-based academics on
business, government and civil society sectors, this groundbreaking
new book undertakes the most thorough analysis yet of how academic
research in the social sciences achieves public policy impacts,
contributes to economic prosperity, and informs public
understanding of policy issues as well as economic and social
changes. The Impact of the Social Sciences addresses and engages
with key issues, including: identifying ways to conceptualise and
model impact in the social sciences developing more sophisticated
ways to measure academic and external impacts of social science
research explaining how impacts from individual academics, research
units and universities can be improved. This book is essential
reading for researchers, academics and anyone involved in
discussions about how to improve the value and impact of funded
research. You can read a snapshot of the results, Visualising the
Data, free online. To download a PDF click here, or to browse a
flipbook, click here.
We live in a world governed by states whose enduring importance and
domination of contemporary politics has been strikingly underlined
by their renewed activism in the face of a global economic crisis.
Yet the very nature of states remains deeply contested, with a
range of competing theories offering very different views of how
they actually do or should operate. In the past this competition
has lead to deep ideological conflict - and even to war. In this
major new work, John S. Dryzek and Patrick Dunleavy provide a
broad-ranging assessment of classical and contemporary theories of
the state, focusing primarily on the democratic state form that has
come to dominate modern politics. The authors' starting point is
the classical theories of the state: pluralism, elite theory,
Marxism and market liberalism. They then turn to the contemporary
forms of pluralism prevalent in political science, systematically
exploring how they address central issues, such as networked
governance, globalization, and changing patterns of electoral and
identity politics. They proceed to analyse a range of key
contemporary critiques of modern states and democracy that have
emerged from feminism, environmentalism, neo-conservatism and
post-modernism. Each approach is carefully introduced and analysed
as far as possible in relation to a common set of issues and
headings. Theories of the Democratic State takes the reader
straight to the heart of contemporary issues and debates and, in
the process, provides a challenging and distinctive introduction to
and reassessment of contemporary political science.
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