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El. knyga: Debating Public Administration: Management Challenges, Choices, and Opportunities

Edited by (American University, Washington, DC, USA), Edited by
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"Informed by a "5 R" framework (reconceptualizing purpose, redefining rationality, recapitalizing human assets, reengaging resources, and revitalizing democratic constitutionalism), this book bridges the gap between theory and practice. In this collection of articles revised for book format, the Durants expertly draw out themes, issues, problems, and prospects in their preface and section introductions. Bulleted lessons and practical take-aways are also added for the busy practitioner and researcher. This book is a 'one stop shop' for cross-disciplinary, cross-sectoral, and cross-professional exchanges on contemporary challenges, choices, and opportunities facing public administrators today"--

"Preface Theory to Practice Advancing the "science, processes, and art of public administration" has long been a central animating purpose of the American Society for Public Administration (ASPA). Such a mission today involves practitioners and scholars providing answers to what is arguably the central animating question facing societies worldwide: how, when, and with what implications for the values treasured in a democratic republic can we best harness for public purposes the dynamism of markets, the passion and commitment of nonprofit and nongovernmental organizations, and the public interest-oriented expertise of the career public service at all levels of government. But dialogue between practitioners and academics has increasingly become the exception rather than the rule in contemporary public administration circles. With this set of challenges in mind, the then-new PAR editor Richard Stillman and managing editor Jos Raadschelders generously asked me to develop a feature for the journal that would be tailored to the information needs of practitioners while simultaneously affording scholars state-of-the-art summaries of the status of current research. As such, my interrelated aims as editor of Theory to Practice (T2P) were fourfold: ?? Afford opportunities for academics, practitioners, and pracademics to inform each other's work in the hope of advancing both practice and theory building in public administration ?? Facilitate cross-disciplinary, cross-sectoral (public, private, and nonprofit), and cross-professional exchanges that break down contemporary tendencies toward fragmentation and "stovepiping" of knowledge applicable to both practice and theory ??"--



Recenzijos

"In the following chapters, thanks to the immense talent and hard work of the editors, authors, and commentators, readers can catch a rare, insightful glimpse of innovative minds at work within modern public administrationeven by whom, why, what, where, and how creative innovation is accomplished throughout the field. And maybe, just maybe, they will draw the conclusion that right now American public administration lives in an incredible golden age." From the Foreword by Richard Stillman, Editor in Chief and Jos C. N. Raadschelders, Managing Editor, Public Administration Review, 2006-2011 "In the following chapters, thanks to the immense talent and hard work of the editors, authors, and commentators, readers can catch a rare, insightful glimpse of innovative minds at work within modern public administrationeven by whom, why, what, where, and how creative innovation is accomplished throughout the field. And maybe, just maybe, they will draw the conclusion that right now American public administration lives in an incredible golden age."From the Foreword by Richard Stillman, Editor in Chief and Jos C. N. Raadschelders, Managing Editor, Public Administration Review, 2006-2011

Foreword xi
Preface: Theory to Practice xv
Contributors xxi
SECTION I RETHINKING ADMINISTRATIVE RATIONALITY IN A DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
1 Managing Successful Organizational Change in the Public Sector
7(20)
Sergio Fernandez
Hal G. Rainey
Patrick E. Connor
Fred Thompson
J. Christopher Mihm
Mary Tschirhart
2 Back to the Future? Performance-Related Pay, Empirical Research, and the Perils of Persistence
27(40)
James L. Perry
Trent A. Engbers
So Yun Jun
David J. Houston
Sanjay K. Pandey
Howard Risher
3 From "Need to Know" to "Need to Share": Tangled Problems, Information Boundaries, and the Building of Public Sector Knowledge Networks
67(22)
Sharon S. Dawes
Anthony M. Cresswell
Theresa A. Pardo
Lisa Blomgren Bingham
Sharon L. Caudle
4 Toward "Strong Democracy" in Global Cities? Social Capital Building, Theory-Driven Reform, and the Los Angeles Neighborhood Council Experience
89(22)
Juliet Musso
Christopher Weare
Thomas Bryer
Terry Y. Cooper
Brian J. Cook
Tina Nabatchi
John Clayton Thomas
5 Reinventing Administrative Prescriptions: The Case for Democratic-Constitutional Impact Statements and Scorecards
111(26)
David H. Rosenbloom
John M. Kamensky
SECTION II Recapitalizing Organizational Capacity
6 Betting on the Future with a Cloudy Crystal Ball? How Financial Theory Can Improve Revenue Forecasting and Budgets in the States
137(18)
Fred Thompson
Bruce L. Gates
Roy T. Meyers
Katherine G. Willoughby
7 Managing Public Service Contracts: Aligning Values, Institutions, and Markets
155(22)
Trevor L. Brown
Matthew Potoski
David M. Van Slyke
Ruth H. Dehoog
Suzanne J. Piotrowski
Thomas F. Reilly
Andrew B. Whitford
8 A Return to Spoils? Revisiting Radical Civil Service Reform in the United States
177(24)
Stephen E. Condrey
R. Paul Battaglio, Jr.
Frank D. Ferris
Norma M. Riccucci
Frank J. Thompson
9 A Solution in Search of a Problem? Discrimination, Affirmative Action, and the New Governance
201(24)
Sally Coleman Selden
Domonic A. Bearfield
Lael R. Keiser
Sharon H. Mastracci
SECTION III Reconceptualizing Institutions For New Policy Challenges
10 Is the World "Flat" or "Spiky"? Rethinking the Governance Implications of Globalization for Economic Development
225(22)
Richard C. Feiock
M. Jae Moon
Hyung Jun Park
William Lyons
Laura A. Reese
John C. Morris
Douglas J. Watson
11 Spanning "Bleeding" Boundaries: Humanitarianism, NGOs, and the Civilian-Military Nexus in the Post-Cold War Era
247(16)
Nancy C. Roberts
Robert "Robin" H. Dorff
12 Left High and Dry? Climate Change, Common-Pool Resource Theory, and the Adaptability of Western Water Compacts
263(20)
Edella Schlager
Tanya Heikkila
Elisabeth A. Graffy
References 283(46)
Index 329
Robert F Durant, Jennifer R.S. Durnat