In this response to Light, Koppell argues that the increasing frequency of reform may reflect Congress\u27s inability to make significant changes to the substance of entrenched government programs. Moreover, he observes that the more profound evolution in government has been the movement toward the market-based provision of services, which has created a demand for new competencies in the public sector
In 1967 Martin Rein and Peter Marris wrote an important book exploring the projects leading to the d...
The title of this volume suggests that Americans have lost faith in government- an assumption that i...
The current agenda in many countries for public service reform was provoked by certain Widespread pe...
There is no more urgent task in American politics than to make fundamental change in how we govern o...
The five-week shutdown of the federal government, ending in late January 2019, illustrated a huge ga...
To not only legislate for but to credibly sustain reforms is a central challenge facing reforming go...
Why do economic reforms that are proceeding successfully often run aground? A number of observers ha...
Reform is a concept that public administration has struggled to define since its inception. The corr...
To thrive in 2020, we must conceive of the field of public administration in the broadest possible t...
Facing fragmented institutions and partisan polarization, officials in the United States often attem...
The George W. Bush administration’s Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) follows a sequence of pres...
Do we really need a new type of campaign finance reform? Fred Wertheimer and Alexandra Edsall say no...
Abstract: The essay starts from the assumption that institutions can be conceived of as patterns of ...
In response to a number of recent high-profile policy questions, administrative agencies have discov...
In the Margaret Chase Smith Essay, Peter Mills draws on his long years of public service in both hou...
In 1967 Martin Rein and Peter Marris wrote an important book exploring the projects leading to the d...
The title of this volume suggests that Americans have lost faith in government- an assumption that i...
The current agenda in many countries for public service reform was provoked by certain Widespread pe...
There is no more urgent task in American politics than to make fundamental change in how we govern o...
The five-week shutdown of the federal government, ending in late January 2019, illustrated a huge ga...
To not only legislate for but to credibly sustain reforms is a central challenge facing reforming go...
Why do economic reforms that are proceeding successfully often run aground? A number of observers ha...
Reform is a concept that public administration has struggled to define since its inception. The corr...
To thrive in 2020, we must conceive of the field of public administration in the broadest possible t...
Facing fragmented institutions and partisan polarization, officials in the United States often attem...
The George W. Bush administration’s Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) follows a sequence of pres...
Do we really need a new type of campaign finance reform? Fred Wertheimer and Alexandra Edsall say no...
Abstract: The essay starts from the assumption that institutions can be conceived of as patterns of ...
In response to a number of recent high-profile policy questions, administrative agencies have discov...
In the Margaret Chase Smith Essay, Peter Mills draws on his long years of public service in both hou...
In 1967 Martin Rein and Peter Marris wrote an important book exploring the projects leading to the d...
The title of this volume suggests that Americans have lost faith in government- an assumption that i...
The current agenda in many countries for public service reform was provoked by certain Widespread pe...