Postmodern Public PolicyPostmodern Public Policy introduces new ways of investigating the urgent difficulties confronting the public sector. The second half of the twentieth century saw approaches to public administration, public policy, and public management dominated by technical-instrumental thought that aspired to neutrality, objectivity, and managerialism. This form of social science has contributed to a public sector where policy debates have been reduced to "bumper-sticker" slogans, a citizenry largely alienated and distant from government, and analysis that ignores history and context and eschews the lived experiences of actual people. Hugh T. Miller brings together the latest thinking from epistemology, evolutionary theory, and discourse theory in an accessible and useful manner to emphasize how a postmodern approach offers the possibility of well-considered, pragmatic solutions grounded in political pluralism and social interaction between public service professionals and community members. |
ما يقوله الناس - كتابة مراجعة
لم نعثر على أي مراجعات في الأماكن المعتادة.
المحتوى
V | 1 |
VI | 4 |
VII | 11 |
VIII | 21 |
IX | 23 |
X | 30 |
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XIX | 73 |
XX | 79 |
XXI | 83 |
XXII | 87 |
XXIII | 91 |
XXIV | 92 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
abstract accommodation action actually administration approach aspiration attempt become begin belief bureaucracy called chapter claims concept Consider context contingency criticize culture decision democratic developed discourse drugs efficiency enacted environment epistemology example exist expressions facts genes historical human ideas images imagine important individual inquiry interest interpret knowledge lack language legal-rational less lived experience logic look manipulation material matter meaning memes memetics move mutation nature neutral objective observer organizations particular pattern performance perhaps perspective pluralism political postmodern present principles privatization problem problematic public policy question rationality reality reason reference relations replication requires rules sense simply situation slogans social practices social science society sort space standard statement structures symbols takes theory things thought tion tradition truth understanding United universal values Weber