Government Agencies - Practices and Lessons from 30 Countries
Edited by Koen Verhoest, Sandra Van Thiel, Geert Bouckaert and Per Lægreid, this book describes and compares how semi-autonomous agencies are created and governed by 30 governments. The section on Norway is a contribution by Per Lægreid, Paul G. Roness and Kristin Rubecksen at the Department of Administration and Organization Theory.
Description:
This book describes and compares how semi-autonomous agencies are created and governed by 30 governments. It leads practitioners and researchers through the crowded world of agencies, describing their tasks, autonomy, control and history. Evidence-based lessons and recommendations are formulated to improve agencification policies in post-NPM times.
Praise:
"Applying a common data and analytic template to 30 countries, the contributors examine the historical origins and legal frameworks of agencies, their capacity to carry out assigned tasks, the political and administrative implications, and more. If the purpose of agencies has been to tear down the vast, vertically-integrated government bureaucracies that dominated public administration during most of the 20th century, most have failed; if their aim has been to improve public services, many have had modest - but not universal - success. With the publication of this book, administrative reformers can innovate with eyes wide open, and with greater comprehension of the difference agencies make in managing the public services."
- Allen Schick, Distinguished University Professor, School of Public Policy, University of Maryland, USA.
See this link for more information and full table of content.
Sist endret: 14.12.2011
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