A renewed interest in aspects of high politics among historians who subscribe to the ‘new political history’ has coincided with the embrace by some political scientists of interpretivism as a method for understanding how beliefs and traditions impact on British political life. In order to examine the potential synergies between these two developments, this article utilizes a form of ‘historical interpretivism’ to study the beliefs and actions of senior civil servants. In 1890, the British government released a Memorandum of Guidance for Officials Appearing before Select Committees – known ever since as the ‘Osmotherly’ rules – to help civil servants navigate the stresses of appearing before parliamentary committees. This article analyses th...
<p>In modern democracies, senior civil servants have outgrown their classic role of mere implementer...
Treface DURING THE PAST FIFTY YEARS, in reaction to the Whig interpretation of history, historians o...
To understand governance, we ask who is telling the story from within which tradition. We argue ther...
A renewed interest in aspects of high politics among historians who subscribe to the ‘new political ...
The history of legal restrictions imposed upon Victorian departmental public servants dates from the...
The 1968 Fulton report made the case for reforming the civil service to meet the demands of modern g...
This thesis examines the interwar British Civil Service. It centres on the ‘elite of the elite’ – th...
As citizens, why do we care about the everyday life of ministers and civil servants? We care because...
This article argues that the study of traditions is an integral part of the human sciences; it then ...
This article argues the study of traditions is an integral part of the human sciences and then conce...
As citizens, why do we care about the everyday life of ministers and civil servants? We care because...
The Foucauldian genre of governmentality studies has provided a number of insight-ful, historically ...
The institution of the civil service is of much contemporary interest here in Britain and elsewhere....
The relationship between civil servants and politics is a delicate one (weber 1922), and it is well ...
Governments wield awesome powers, but what do those at the very top of governments actually do? In t...
<p>In modern democracies, senior civil servants have outgrown their classic role of mere implementer...
Treface DURING THE PAST FIFTY YEARS, in reaction to the Whig interpretation of history, historians o...
To understand governance, we ask who is telling the story from within which tradition. We argue ther...
A renewed interest in aspects of high politics among historians who subscribe to the ‘new political ...
The history of legal restrictions imposed upon Victorian departmental public servants dates from the...
The 1968 Fulton report made the case for reforming the civil service to meet the demands of modern g...
This thesis examines the interwar British Civil Service. It centres on the ‘elite of the elite’ – th...
As citizens, why do we care about the everyday life of ministers and civil servants? We care because...
This article argues that the study of traditions is an integral part of the human sciences; it then ...
This article argues the study of traditions is an integral part of the human sciences and then conce...
As citizens, why do we care about the everyday life of ministers and civil servants? We care because...
The Foucauldian genre of governmentality studies has provided a number of insight-ful, historically ...
The institution of the civil service is of much contemporary interest here in Britain and elsewhere....
The relationship between civil servants and politics is a delicate one (weber 1922), and it is well ...
Governments wield awesome powers, but what do those at the very top of governments actually do? In t...
<p>In modern democracies, senior civil servants have outgrown their classic role of mere implementer...
Treface DURING THE PAST FIFTY YEARS, in reaction to the Whig interpretation of history, historians o...
To understand governance, we ask who is telling the story from within which tradition. We argue ther...