The authors suggest that some of the problems of the public sector are self-inflicted and that current policies may only deliver partial success 'at a price we cannot afford'. It proposes a radical alternative and discusses practical ways it could be implemented. It also explores the threats and opportunities that such an approach might face.
The authors suggest that some of the problems of the public sector are self-inflicted and that current policies may only deliver partial success 'at a price we cannot afford'. It proposes a radical alternative and discusses practical ways it could be implemented. It also explores the threats and opportunities that such an approach might face.
ROGER LATHAM Visiting Fellow at Nottingham Business School, UK, and the current President of the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy (CIPFA). After an early career in the City he worked extensively in the public sector, reaching senior positions as Treasurer and Chief Executive of Nottinghamshire County Council. He was widely regarded as an original and radical thinker on public sector finance issues, and contributed to or chaired a number of groups and working parties on reforms to public services. He was also President of the Society of County Treasurers in 2000/1. He continues to research and write about public sector issues. MALCOLM PROWLE Professor of Business Performance at Nottingham Business School, UK and Visiting Professor at the Open University Business School, UK. He has over forty years experience of public services (in the UK and overseas) in central government, local government, health and education. He is a member of CIPFA and has held senior financial management posts in public service organisations and had many years of consultancy experience with two international consulting firms (KPMG and PWC). He has advised Ministers, Ambassadors, senior civil servants, public service managers and service professionals on a variety of public policy and policy implementation issues and has had several periods of secondment to Whitehall departments of state. He has also been financial adviser to a House of Commons Select Committee,adviser to two shadow ministers and a consultant to the World Health Organisation. He has led and participated in many funded research projects on public sector themes, has published six books and numerous research reports and papers in academic and professional journals.
Inhaltsangabe
PART I: ISSUES AND ALTERNATIVES Introduction The Challenges Facing UK Public Services We Are Not Alone... How Others Have Coped Strategic Background PART II: THE TRADITIONAL MODEL OF PUBLIC SERVICE AND ITS PROSPECTS FOR SUCCESSES The Development of Modern Public Services The Characteristics of the Current UK Public Services Model UK Public Services - Attempts at Reform PART III: RADICAL ALTERNATIVES AND CHARTING THE WAY FORWARD A New Paradigm Managing the Change - What are the Implications? The Wider View Postscript References Bibliography
PART I: ISSUES AND ALTERNATIVES Introduction The Challenges Facing UK Public Services We Are Not Alone... How Others Have Coped Strategic Background PART II: THE TRADITIONAL MODEL OF PUBLIC SERVICE AND ITS PROSPECTS FOR SUCCESSES The Development of Modern Public Services The Characteristics of the Current UK Public Services Model UK Public Services - Attempts at Reform PART III: RADICAL ALTERNATIVES AND CHARTING THE WAY FORWARD A New Paradigm Managing the Change - What are the Implications? The Wider View Postscript References Bibliography
Rezensionen
'This provocative and clarifying book ...invites us to contemplate the historic watershed that Britain is in, and offers a well-grounded, experience-based set of choices that would end the impotence and provide genuine opportunities for local governance that would work. It's an ambitious and clear call that is issued here; we cannot ignore it if we are to find our way out of this current negative spiral of insanity.'
- Dr Margaret Wheatley, Utah, USA
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