Part I. INTRODUCTORY
1: Public Management: Seven Propostions
2: Calamity, Conspiracy, and Chaos in Public Management
3: Control and Regulation in Public Management
Part II. CLASSIC AND RECURRING IDEAS IN PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
4: Doing Public Management the Hierarchist Way
5: Doing Public Management the Individualist Way
6: Doing Public Management the Egalitarian Way
7: Doing Public Management the Fatalist Way?
Part III. RHETORIC, MODERNITY, AND SCIENCE IN PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
8: Public Management, Rhetoric, and Culture
9: Contemporary Public Management: A New Global Paradigm?
10: Taking Stock: The State of the Art of the State
Winner: W. J. M. Mackenzie Book Prize
`clearly written, theoretically amibitious and interesting,
historically sensitive and analytically sharp work based on
exceptionally wide reading that has been intelligently absorbed and
organised ... it is strongly to be recommended both to the
specialist whose ideas are likely to be severely challenged by
Hood's approach and to the general reader who wishes to acquire an
understanding of ideas on ways of organising institutions in
general and those of
public management in particular'
Reason in Practice Vol 1, No 1, 2001
`this well-written and very readable book on public management is
rich with references to the ideas of past thinkers on the subject
and to past practices of public management'
Reason in Practice, Vol 1, No 1, 2001
`a timely and important book, by one of Europe's most repected
administrative scholars ... this text is tightly organized,
well-written and thought provoking ... a clear, concise,
comprehensive survey of major public management ideas, their
strengths and weaknesses.'
Richard J. Stillman II, New Institutionalism and Organizational
Theory, A Review Article.
This book demonstrates many of the numerous strengths of
Christopher Hood's scholarship. He has a sharp analytic mind that
categorizes and conceptualizes complex matters very effectively.
The arguments here are advanced in a clear and convincing manner,
and he is also sensitive to the nuances of both the theory and the
evidence used to ramify the theoretical arguments ... this is
absolutely a 'must read' for students of public administration. It
should also be
read by those scholars who easily dismiss the roots of public
administration. B Guy Peters, Political Studies (1999) XLVII
"The book stands in the tradition of Hood's other work -
intellectually virtuosic, speculative in argument, and lifting
itself above the detail it addresses." Richard Parry, University of
Edinburgh, Journal of Social Policy, May 2000
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