In October 2010, the UK’s Coalition Government announced a radical reduction in the number of public bodies in the UK. This research tests the impact of three factors identified in the termination literature as affecting agency survival: political turnover, age and agency type. The research found that advisory Non-Departmental Public Bodies were five times more likely to have been identified for abolition or merger than other agency types. The research also found that agency age was a factor, but that political turnover was not significant
Abstract. The ability of a government to remain in power depends partially upon its vulnerability to...
Why do constituent parties that participated in a party merger that was intended to be permanent dec...
All new governments like culling ‘quangos’ that have outlived their usefulness. Chris Gilson find th...
In October 2010, the UK’s Coalition Government announced a radical reduction in the number of public...
We investigate the life span and risk of termination of 723 arm’s length agencies in the United King...
This article extends the theory of government agency survival from separation of powers to parliamen...
This article examines agency mortality between 1946 and 1997 and argues that, contrary to popular be...
PublishedArticleThis article extends the theory of government agency survival from separation of pow...
Much research following Kaufman’s classic study Are Government Organizations Immortal? has investiga...
When administrative agencies are terminated, do they quietly fade from public view? On the one hand,...
How does media attention influence government decisions about whether to terminate independent admin...
publication-status: Acceptedtypes: ArticleThis is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an articl...
How do public agencies respond when reform proposals threaten downsizing, reduction in functions, or...
ArticleThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI...
The literature on government coalitions uses a common definition of when governments terminate and n...
Abstract. The ability of a government to remain in power depends partially upon its vulnerability to...
Why do constituent parties that participated in a party merger that was intended to be permanent dec...
All new governments like culling ‘quangos’ that have outlived their usefulness. Chris Gilson find th...
In October 2010, the UK’s Coalition Government announced a radical reduction in the number of public...
We investigate the life span and risk of termination of 723 arm’s length agencies in the United King...
This article extends the theory of government agency survival from separation of powers to parliamen...
This article examines agency mortality between 1946 and 1997 and argues that, contrary to popular be...
PublishedArticleThis article extends the theory of government agency survival from separation of pow...
Much research following Kaufman’s classic study Are Government Organizations Immortal? has investiga...
When administrative agencies are terminated, do they quietly fade from public view? On the one hand,...
How does media attention influence government decisions about whether to terminate independent admin...
publication-status: Acceptedtypes: ArticleThis is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an articl...
How do public agencies respond when reform proposals threaten downsizing, reduction in functions, or...
ArticleThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI...
The literature on government coalitions uses a common definition of when governments terminate and n...
Abstract. The ability of a government to remain in power depends partially upon its vulnerability to...
Why do constituent parties that participated in a party merger that was intended to be permanent dec...
All new governments like culling ‘quangos’ that have outlived their usefulness. Chris Gilson find th...