This book explores the role of civil servants and their trade unions in the public management reform process, framing it in its economic, social, cultural and legal contexts. Building on neo-institutional and stakeholder theories, the book shows how staff and their representative organisations have influenced the formulation and implementation of public management reforms in twelve OECD countries. This study challenges top-down elite theories that have dominated the existing literature, explaining how staff participation practices, both direct and indirect, have impacted on the implementation of reforms in different ways in different countries. The book concludes that variations in staff participation in the reform process depend upon institutional and political factors and the distribution of power in the employment relationship.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
'This book is a very welcome addition to the literature on public service reform...From a research point of view, the book is valueable in that it provides a series of frameworks within which further studies can be conducted not just in the civil service but in other parts of the public services.' - Hamish Mathieson, Public Administration
'...a timely and welcome contribution to both the current public management and HRM literature...the systematic structure and rigour of templates used in the book give it strong coherence and make it a very useful handbook for researchers and HRM specialists with international interests. This book should be available in every university library.' - Elke Löffler, International Employment Relations Review
'...a timely and welcome contribution to both the current public management and HRM literature...the systematic structure and rigour of templates used in the book give it strong coherence and make it a very useful handbook for researchers and HRM specialists with international interests. This book should be available in every university library.' - Elke Löffler, International Employment Relations Review