This updated third edition of the Introduction to Comparative Public Administration explores the cultural, organizational, personnel and financial aspects of public administration across a wide range of European countries. The authors provide country profiles, comparative reform assessments and case studies to highlight the similarities and differences among European public administrations, with key learning objectives highlighted for each chapter.Key Features of this third edition:Examples from both Western and Central Eastern European administrative systemsIn-depth empirical analysis paired with case studies of administrative systems and reform trajectories to enhance students' comparative interest, knowledge and skillsAccounts of recent reforms and institutional changes, such as digitalization in public administration, as well as the major trends of public sector modernization in an era of multiple crisesThis revised textbook is an indispensable resource for students, researchers and lecturers of political and administrative sciences, public management and the wider social sciences. It is also of great interest to policymakers, NGOs, administrators and public CEOs interested in systems reform in Europe as well as the major trends of public sector modernization in an era of multiple crises.
Sabine Kuhlmann, Professor of Political Sciences, Administration and Organization, University of Potsdam, Hellmut Wollmann, Professor Emeritus of Public Administration, Social Science Institute, Humboldt University of Berlin and Renate Reiter, Senior Fellow at the Chair of Political Science III: Policy Analysis and Environmental Policy, FernUniversität of Hagen, Germany
ContentsPreface to the third edition1 Introduction2 Theories and analytical approaches3 Models and traditions of public administration in Europe: country profiles4 Administrative reforms from a comparative perspective5 Comparative summary6 Future prospects of comparative public administrationRecommended readingReferences
‘With a new co-author, Renate Reiter, the long-awaited third edition of this classic in European comparative public administration is now available. Maintaining the framework of a parallel comparison among six countries – France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Sweden, and the UK – the book analyses the most recent developments in modernisation approaches comprehensively under five aspects: central-local relations, territorial reform, government-market relations, structural reform within government and digital transformation. Can the Neo-Weberian State replace New Public Management?’
Linda Alamaa, Stina Melander, Ylva Stubbergaard, Niklas Altermark, Andreas Bergh, Josef Chaib, Gissur Ó Erlingsson, Mats Fred, Astrid Hedin, Maria Hedlund, Sabine Kuhlmann, Dalia Mukhtar-Landgren, Petra Svensson, Per-Anders Svärd