All Stories

  1. Comparing blunders in government
  2. What is regulation? An interdisciplinary concept analysis
  3. Customer engagement in UK water regulation: towards a collaborative regulatory state?
  4. The Routledge Handbook to Accountability and Welfare State Reforms in Europe
  5. Reputation and Accountability Relationships: Managing Accountability Expectations through Reputation
  6. The Rationality Paradox of Nudge: Rational Tools of Government in a World of Bounded Rationality
  7. DESIGNING RESILIENT INSTITUTIONS FOR TRANSBOUNDARY CRISIS MANAGEMENT: A TIME FOR PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
  8. The Reputational Basis of Public Accountability
  9. Whitehall in the Caribbean? The legacy of colonial administration for post-colonial democratic development
  10. British utility regulation: Consolidation, existential angst, or fiasco?
  11. The Problem-solving Capacity of the Modern State
  12. Regulatory Capacity
  13. Introduction
  14. Conclusion
  15. Fiscal Squeeze in Germany:
  16. Science, Badgers, Politics: Advocacy Coalitions and Policy Change in Bovine Tuberculosis Policy in Britain
  17. Exploring the co-ordination of economic regulation
  18. Regulatory Capture Recaptured
  19. The British Regulatory State under the Coalition Government: Volatile Stability Continued
  20. Crowdsourcing and regulatory reviews: A new way of challenging red tape in British government?
  21. Dismantling Public Policy: Preferences, Strategies, and Effects
  22. Crisis, Resources and the State: Executive Politics in the Age of the Depleted State
  23. Political Science Research Methods in Action
  24. Politics in the Boardroom: Corporate Pay, Networks and Recruitment of Former Parliamentarians, Ministers and Civil Servants in Britain
  25. Rewards for High Public Office in Europe and North America
  26. Public administration and executive politics: perennial questions in changing contexts
  27. Executive Politics in Times of Crisis
  28. Into an Age of Multiple Austerities? Public Management and Public Service Bargains across OECD Countries
  29. Understanding Regulation
  30. Conclusions
  31. Introduction
  32. Franchising
  33. Why Regulate?
  34. What is ‘Good’ Regulation?
  35. Explaining Regulation
  36. Regulatory Failure
  37. Regulating Risks
  38. Regulatory Strategies
  39. Emissions Trading
  40. Enforcing Regulation
  41. Responsive Regulation
  42. Risk-based Regulation
  43. Standards and Principles
  44. Accountability, Procedures, and Fairness
  45. Regulatory Competition and Coordination
  46. Multi-level Regulation
  47. Regulation and the European Union
  48. Regulation and Development
  49. Global and International Regulation
  50. Regulating Prices in Natural Monopolies
  51. Using Competition in Network Industries
  52. Implementing Price Controls
  53. Self-regulation, Meta-regulation, and Regulatory Networks
  54. Cost-Benefit Analysis and Regulatory Impact Assessment
  55. Separation and Contestability in Network Industries
  56. Efficiency and Innovation in Network Industries
  57. Arguing about Financial Regulation: Comparing National Discourses on the Global Financial Crisis
  58. A TIME FOR PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
  59. Risk, Regulation and Crisis: Comparing National Responses in Food Safety Regulation
  60. Governance as contested logics of control: Europeanized meat inspection regimes in Denmark and Germany
  61. Governing Mega-Events: Tools of Security Risk Management for the FIFA 2006 World Cup in Germany and London 2012 Olympic Games
  62. Toward a New Era of Administrative Reform? The Myth of Post‐NPM in New Zealand
  63. KEY CONCEPTS IN GOVERNANCE- by Mark Bevir
  64. The Oxford Handbook of Regulation
  65. The Future of Regulation
  66. Accountability in the Regulatory State
  67. Regulation Inside Government: Retro‐Theory Vindicated or Outdated?
  68. Introduction: Regulation—the Field and the Developing Agenda
  69. Letter to the Editor ofPublic Administration Reviewin Response to a Recent Symposium on Financial Regulatory Reform
  70. DODGY KEBABS EVERYWHERE? VARIETY OF WORLDVIEWS AND REGULATORY CHANGE
  71. Tradition and Public Administration
  72. The Public Management of Risk: The Case for Deliberating among Worldviews
  73. High-quality regulation: its popularity, its tools and its future
  74. Regulation, the Regulatory State and European Politics
  75. Democracy in Europe: The EU and National Polities – By Vivien Schmidt
  76. Comparing Non-Hierarchical Governance in Action: the Open Method of Co-ordination in Pensions and Information Society
  77. The Civil Service in the 21st Century
  78. Comparative Public Policy
  79. Withering in the Heat? In Search of the Regulatory State in the Commonwealth Caribbean
  80. From Sir Humphrey to Sir Nigel: What Future for the Public Service Bargain after Blairworld?
  81. The Politics of Public Service Bargains
  82. Conclusion
  83. How Public Service Bargains Change and Fall
  84. Introducing Public Service Bargains
  85. Trustee‐Type Public Service Bargains
  86. Agency‐Type Public Service Bargains
  87. Putting the Pieces Together
  88. Public Service Managerialism and Public Service Bargains: Control, Blame Avoidance, and Cheating
  89. Reward in Public Service Bargains: Pyramids, Noblesse Oblige, Turkey Races, and Lotteries of Life
  90. Competency in Public Service Bargains: Wonks, Sages, Deliverers, and Go‐Betweens
  91. Loyalty and Responsibility in Public Service Bargains: Judges, Partners, Executives, and Jesters
  92. The New Public Management 'Revolution' in Political Control of the Public Sector: Promises and Outcomes in Three European Prison Systems
  93. Conclusion: Is competency management a passing fad?
  94. Symposium Introduction: Competency and Higher Civil Servants
  95. Aesop With Variations: Civil Service Competency as A Case of German Tortoise and British Hare?
  96. The importance of being modern: international benchmarking and national regulatory innovation
  97. Governing multi-level governance: comparing domain dynamics in German Land-local relationships and prisons
  98. Control Over Government: Institutional Isomorphism and Governance Dynamics in German Public Administration
  99. Regulatory Innovation
  100. Beyond stereotype : comparing British and German bureaucracies in the age of NPM
  101. Competency, Bureaucracy, and Public Management Reform: A Comparative Analysis
  102. Competition Policy: From Centrality to Muddling Through?
  103. Competency and bureaucracy: diffusion, application and appropriate response?
  104. Institutional Choice and Policy Transfer: Reforming British and German Railway Regulation
  105. The Limitations of ‘Policy Transfer’ and ‘Lesson Drawing’ for Public Policy Research
  106. Embedding Regulatory Autonomy In Caribbean Telecommunications
  107. Regulatory Reform in Small Developing States: Globalisation, Regulatory Autonomy and Jamaican Telecommunications
  108. The Wrong Type of Regulation? Regulatory Failure and the Railways in Britain and Germany
  109. Book Reviews
  110. Varieties of Europeanisation and the National Regulatory State
  111. Pavlovian Policy Responses to Media Feeding Frenzies? Dangerous Dogs Regulation in Comparative Perspective
  112. Transparency Mechanisms: Building Publicness into Public Services
  113. Isomorphism of national policies? The ‘Europeanisation’ of German competition and public procurement law
  114. National tunes and a European melody? Competition law reform in the UK and Germany
  115. Conclusions
  116. Accountability and Transparency in Regulation: Critiques, Doctrines and Instruments
  117. Introduction
  118. Semistructured Interviews and Informal Institutions
  119. Conclusion
  120. Introduction
  121. Executive Politics and Policy Instruments
  122. Conclusion
  123. Accountability and Consumer Sovereignty
  124. Risk and Public Policy
  125. Administrative Patterns and National Politics
  126. Back to the Future? Regulatory Innovation and the Railways in Britain and Germany
  127. Pavlovian Innovation, Pet Solutions and Economizing on Rationality? Politicians and Dangerous Dogs
  128. Regulation in crisis: reputation, capacity and limitations
  129. Administrative Patterns and National Politics
  130. Administrative Patterns and National Politics
  131. Re-thinking Institutional Endowment in Jamaica: Misguided Theory, Prophecy of Doom or Explanation for Regulatory Change?
  132. Withering in the Heat? In Search of the Regulatory State in Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago
  133. Next Steps und zwei Schritte zurück? Stereotypen, Executive Agencies und die Politik der Delegation in Gro\britannien
  134. Civil Service Reforms, Public Service Bargains and Dynamics of Institutional Change
  135. Critical infrastructures, resilience and organisation of mega-projects: the Olympic Games