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This important book presents new work by respected scholars in the
field of public administration in Europe, and evaluates both
American and European approaches to public sector management and
administrative reform.The book begins with introductory chapters
examining public management in Europe and the United States and
explores the paradoxes that exist in administrative reform. Part
two presents a wide range of case studies of European management
reforms including the United Kingdom, France, Austria, Spain,
Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland. It offers a balanced view
of the managerial trend which appears to be sweeping across Western
Europe. This is achieved by presenting the full spectrum of case
studies from success to failure. Balance is created by presenting
counter-arguments and criticisms of the prevailing trend of reform.
The third part considers management, legal state and democracy.
Finally, the volume concludes with a North American perspective on
the administrative reform in Europe. Public Management and
Administrative Reform will be indispensable to academics,
policymakers and management practitioners in the public sector,
especially those working within Europe.
This book is the immediate result of the co-operation of a great
number of scholars in the Netherlands Institute of Government
(NIG). NIG is an interuniversity research school. As such it has a
double task. In addition to offering a Ph.D program to students in
Public Administration it also is a research institute in which a
great number of scholars from seven Dutch universities participate
and work on a common research program. The chapters in this book
are all products of the research program that started in 1995. This
program had the ambition to explore the frontiers of the discipline
in two respects. First by studying a number of recent developments
in society and their consequences for the functioning of
government. These consequences can be summarised as the development
of a system of multi level and multi actor governance. Second, by
contributing to the knowledge of institutions, both by studying
what factors are most important in the formation and change of
institutions and by studying the effects of institutions on the
behaviour of actors in different political and administrative
settings. Most contributions to this volume either have their
origin in conferences organized by the NIG or were published as an
NIG working paper. We are grateful to Marcia Clifford and Connie
Hoekstra who prepared the final version of the manuscript, to Ian
Priestnall who took care of the language editing and to an
anonymous reviewer whose comments were gratefully used.
What is the relationship between changes in modern states and the
current practice of public administration, on the one hand, and
recent developments in the sciences of administration on the other?
The contributors to this unique book address this fundamental
question by surveying the origins, evolution and the contemporary
state-of-the-art of administrative sciences in Europe and the
United States. A distinguished group of international authors
presents the historical development of the study of administration
in their respective countries and an analysis of how particular
national approaches to the study of administration or 'the way of
thinking' influences and are influenced by various national
institutions. The authors make comparisons between each country and
more generally between Europe and United States Public
Administration. This book will introduce American audiences to the
various European approaches to administrative sciences and vice
versa, and Europeans to contemporary American public administration
theory. For many American as well as European students in the
field, this volume offers a unique comparison between the large,
established field of research in the United States and more recent,
less well known European administrative sciences. The Modern State
and Its Study will be of great interest to scholars of public
administration throughout the world. Practicing public
administrators as well as new students of this field will find this
volume to be a helpful survey of the current vast and rapidly
growing body of public administration research on both Europe and
the United States.
This book is the immediate result of the co-operation of a great
number of scholars in the Netherlands Institute of Government
(NIG). NIG is an interuniversity research school. As such it has a
double task. In addition to offering a Ph.D program to students in
Public Administration it also is a research institute in which a
great number of scholars from seven Dutch universities participate
and work on a common research program. The chapters in this book
are all products of the research program that started in 1995. This
program had the ambition to explore the frontiers of the discipline
in two respects. First by studying a number of recent developments
in society and their consequences for the functioning of
government. These consequences can be summarised as the development
of a system of multi level and multi actor governance. Second, by
contributing to the knowledge of institutions, both by studying
what factors are most important in the formation and change of
institutions and by studying the effects of institutions on the
behaviour of actors in different political and administrative
settings. Most contributions to this volume either have their
origin in conferences organized by the NIG or were published as an
NIG working paper. We are grateful to Marcia Clifford and Connie
Hoekstra who prepared the final version of the manuscript, to Ian
Priestnall who took care of the language editing and to an
anonymous reviewer whose comments were gratefully used.
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