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How we manage public services and hold them to account is
critically important. Yet austerity, recent changes to
accountability frameworks, and the loss of the Audit Commission
have created a huge deficit in our understanding of how well
services are delivered. The time is thus right to re-examine the
state of our vital public services, as well as how we can make them
more accountable. This book reopens the debate on what
accountability means and provides unique insights into an
increasingly complex organizational landscape. It presents a new
and innovative way of evaluating public services that should be of
use to academics and public servants alike. Synthesising empirical
work across local government, health and social care, the police,
and fire services, this book also explores the relationship between
financial and performance accountability and makes the case for the
need for a distinctive sense of public service accountability.
How we manage public services and hold them to account is
critically important. Yet austerity, recent changes to
accountability frameworks, and the loss of the Audit Commission
have created a huge deficit in our understanding of how well
services are delivered. The time is thus right to re-examine the
state of our vital public services, as well as how we can make them
more accountable. This book reopens the debate on what
accountability means and provides unique insights into an
increasingly complex organizational landscape. It presents a new
and innovative way of evaluating public services that should be of
use to academics and public servants alike. Synthesising empirical
work across local government, health and social care, the police,
and fire services, this book also explores the relationship between
financial and performance accountability and makes the case for the
need for a distinctive sense of public service accountability.
Contemporary reforms of the fire and rescue service result from two
excoriating reports from the National Audit Office and the Public
Accounts Committee that demonstrated the inadequacy of contemporary
policy, service delivery and public assurance for fire and rescue
services in England. This book focuses on the key reforms proposed
by Theresa May when she was Home Secretary in response to these
reports and critically examines the new National Framework and the
new external Inspectorate that were created as a result. Rebuilding
the Fire and Rescue Services will prove invaluable for both
academics and practitioners in order to build a more efficient and
effective performance regime for this essential emergency service.
It demonstrates the context, the parameters, the agencies and the
inter-relationships that operate within the areas of policy
development, service delivery and public assurance in the service.
It shows how the new national framework and the new inspectorate
can be improved. Most of all it shows the need for robust data and
intelligence at both the national and local levels.
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