|
|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
The destruction of the Covid-19 pandemic has marked every society
with deep-seated wounds whose scars have only begun to heal. Yet,
even as societies take their first steps away from the trauma of
the pandemic, they confront new and perhaps equally daunting
challenges in the post-Covid era. These challenges offer a unique
occasion to consider how the mechanisms of public value (PV)
creation and preservation can be rebuilt and improved, mindful of
what has been left in the pandemic’s wake, and of the difficult
road that lies ahead. The aim of this book, then, is to examine the
forward-looking possibilities of multi-stakeholder value
co-creation, which involves the renewed efforts of civil society,
public managers, politicians, and society-at-large in a new
post-pandemic era. The book examines many different facets that
appeal deeply to public value scholarship: value stability &
transitions, inequalities within & between publics,
necropolitics, disaster preparedness, value measurement, and
sustainability, all of which represent important explorations
within public value theory, and can greatly enrich PV research
going forward. This book will therefore be of use to both academics
and practitioners of public administration and public policy, as
well as scholars of government, health care policy, and economics.
Contemporary financial markets have been characterized by
sociocultural phenomena such as "meme stocks", the Gamestop short
squeeze, and "You Only Live Once (YOLO) trading". These are
movements led by small-scale retail investors banding together to
participate forcefully in financial markets through decentralized
but coordinated actions. This book deploys many different
subdisciplines to explore the recent ‘power grabbing’ of retail
investors and the online environment that enables them to join the
ranks of major financial players, and participate in contemporary
capitalism. It offers multiple perspectives on the genesis, role,
motivations, power, and future prospects of retail investors as a
force in contemporary financial markets. Drawing upon the insights
of authors hailing from many different countries, the book frames
YOLO capitalism through numerous angles that help to explain the
context and the importance of activist retail investors in modern
financial markets, and thereby explore the possibilities of a
transformed financial future with much wider small-scale
participation. The book assesses the potential of online - and
other - communities in enabling global coordination in impacting or
even driving financial and crypto markets, and the challenges that
come with it and weighs the competing narratives both positive and
negative regarding YOLO capitalism. It strikes a balanced
assessment of their legal, cultural, behavioural, economic, and
political roles in modern finance. This book will be of interest to
a multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary audience of scholars in
financial markets, financial regulation, political economy, public
administration, macroeconomics, corporate governance, and the
philosophy and the sociology of finance.
Widespread crisis-events such as pandemics can impose an immense
strain on societies' multi-stakeholder efforts to preserve and
sustain the mechanisms of public value (PV) creation. The global
coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic exemplifies this because it has
pushed civil society, public managers, politicians, and
society-at-large into uncharted waters, and at times brought them
under exceptional duress. Then how can public value's agents
attempt to conceive, create, and preserve value under such
disruptive circumstances? How could public value theory's (PVT's)
theoretical precepts be informed by the pandemic? This book seeks
to inform the PVT literature by drawing upon interesting lenses
that have emerged in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. It
addresses PVT's notions of value conflicts, post-Truth politics,
multilateral PV, nationalism and the public, comparative PV
creation, and PV in developing-country contexts, in order to
construct a multi-stakeholder and internationally informed set of
analyses on public value's systems and agents in uniquely
distressing circumstances such as pandemics. This book will
therefore be of use to both academics and practitioners of public
administration and public policy, as well as scholars of
government, healthcare policy, and economics.
Public value theory speaks to the co-creation of value between
politicians, citizens, and public managers, with a focus on the
public manager in terms of her contributions, initiatives, and
limitations in value creation. But just who are public managers?
Public value regularly treats the "public manager" as synonymous
with bureaucrat, government official, civil servant, or public
administrator. However, the categories of public managers represent
a more versatile and expansive set of agents in society than they
are given credit for, and the discourse of public value has
typically not delved sufficiently into the variety of possible
cadres that might comprise the "public manager." This book seeks to
go beyond the assumed understandings of who the public manager is
and what she does. It does so by examining the processes of value
creation that are driven by non-traditional sets of public
managers, which include the judiciary, the armed forces,
multilateral institutions, and central banks. It applies public
value tools to understand their value creation and uses their
unique attributes to inform our understanding of public value
theory. Tailored to an audience comprising public administration
scholars, students of government, public officials, practitioners,
and social scientists interested in contemporary problems of values
in society, this book helps to advance public administration
thought by re-examining the theory's ultimate protagonist: the
public manager. It therefore constitutes an important effort to
take public value theory forward by going "beyond" conceptions of
the public manager as she has thus far been understood.
Public value theory speaks to the co-creation of value between
politicians, citizens, and public managers, with a focus on the
public manager in terms of her contributions, initiatives, and
limitations in value creation. But just who are public managers?
Public value regularly treats the "public manager" as synonymous
with bureaucrat, government official, civil servant, or public
administrator. However, the categories of public managers represent
a more versatile and expansive set of agents in society than they
are given credit for, and the discourse of public value has
typically not delved sufficiently into the variety of possible
cadres that might comprise the "public manager." This book seeks to
go beyond the assumed understandings of who the public manager is
and what she does. It does so by examining the processes of value
creation that are driven by non-traditional sets of public
managers, which include the judiciary, the armed forces,
multilateral institutions, and central banks. It applies public
value tools to understand their value creation and uses their
unique attributes to inform our understanding of public value
theory. Tailored to an audience comprising public administration
scholars, students of government, public officials, practitioners,
and social scientists interested in contemporary problems of values
in society, this book helps to advance public administration
thought by re-examining the theory's ultimate protagonist: the
public manager. It therefore constitutes an important effort to
take public value theory forward by going "beyond" conceptions of
the public manager as she has thus far been understood.
Public value theory has advanced over the past 30 years, but there
is a need to extend its boundary outwards into new contexts and
update its discourse to reflect new social challenges. We are now
trying to create value in a globalized world, with supranational
entities, with new international alliances and institutions, in a
frightening post-truth era. How can public managers grapple with
these emerging realities? This book seeks to provide answers to
such public value questions by applying powerful budgeting
perspectives. Using case studies of independent budget offices, key
fiscal instruments, and leading public value frameworks, this book
stands out in its use of budgetary lenses to answer pertinent
questions about the multidimensional processes of value creation by
and for a wider society. Pushing the debate on public value forward
and taking it onto the global stage, the book asks whether public
value (and other public administration theories) are applicable
beyond the traditional context of the pro-globalization Western
liberal democracies in which they were conceived. It does this by
exploring the realms of developing countries, supranational
entities, and post-Communist societies, among others. Finally, it
presents these explorations in light of very recent sociopolitical
trends and phenomena, including the growth of civil society, the
global financial crisis, the illiberal democracy, and the
post-truth era. Tailored to an audience comprising public
administration scholars, students of government, budget
practitioners, and social scientists interested in contemporary
problems of values in society, this book helps to advance public
administration thought by extending public value theory into new
contexts and relating it to the growing global challenges of public
life.
Public value theory has advanced over the past 30 years, but there
is a need to extend its boundary outwards into new contexts and
update its discourse to reflect new social challenges. We are now
trying to create value in a globalized world, with supranational
entities, with new international alliances and institutions, in a
frightening post-truth era. How can public managers grapple with
these emerging realities? This book seeks to provide answers to
such public value questions by applying powerful budgeting
perspectives. Using case studies of independent budget offices, key
fiscal instruments, and leading public value frameworks, this book
stands out in its use of budgetary lenses to answer pertinent
questions about the multidimensional processes of value creation by
and for a wider society. Pushing the debate on public value forward
and taking it onto the global stage, the book asks whether public
value (and other public administration theories) are applicable
beyond the traditional context of the pro-globalization Western
liberal democracies in which they were conceived. It does this by
exploring the realms of developing countries, supranational
entities, and post-Communist societies, among others. Finally, it
presents these explorations in light of very recent sociopolitical
trends and phenomena, including the growth of civil society, the
global financial crisis, the illiberal democracy, and the
post-truth era. Tailored to an audience comprising public
administration scholars, students of government, budget
practitioners, and social scientists interested in contemporary
problems of values in society, this book helps to advance public
administration thought by extending public value theory into new
contexts and relating it to the growing global challenges of public
life.
|
You may like...
New Times
Rehana Rossouw
Paperback
(1)
R280
R259
Discovery Miles 2 590
Bad Luck Penny
Amy Heydenrych
Paperback
(1)
R350
R323
Discovery Miles 3 230
Booth
Karen Joy Fowler
Paperback
R463
R260
Discovery Miles 2 600
The Pink House
Catherine Alliott
Paperback
R395
R365
Discovery Miles 3 650
|