Publics, Politics and Power
Remaking the Public in Public Services
- Janet Newman - The Open University
- John Clarke - The Open University, UK
Publics, Politics and Power offers an innovative analysis of the changing fortunes of publicness.
Key Features and Benefits
- Explores the emergence of new forms, sites and practices of publicness and the implications for public services
- Examines the remaking of the public in the context of new formations of the nation, where issues of migration, diversity and faith challenge traditional forms of solidarity and citizenship
- Traces the emergence of hybrid organizational forms and new strategies for governing publics and public services
- Assesses some of the ways in which the public domain is being recast around notions of civil society, community, and populist participatory politics.
Chapters include vignettes illustrating the book's core concepts, making this a useful teaching resource and valuable reading for students of public management, public and social policy, sociology and cultural studies and for those working in public services.
Janet Newman is a Professor of Social Policy at the Open University, and Director of the Publics Research Programme within the Centre for Citizenship, Identities and Governance. John Clarke is a Professor of Social Policy at the Open University. His research has centered on conflicts over the future of welfare states, public services and citizenship in the UK and elsewhere.
Well written and very topical book. Goes well, for example, with more theretical literature.
really good book with some general interest in the change of service sector in the UK. many examples. the strong sociological perspective refers not to the political science focus in my research. I will choose some chapters, eg. 4, 5, 8 and reference chapters to power and politics.
Still considering incorporating into my course, but am concerned about the length of the book, given the large amount of material I need to cover concerning general organizational theory.
This is a useful book and it is very relevant to those students who are employed in the public sector. The attention to the role of citizens and the impact of this on practice is particularly relevant.
I shall be recommending this book to students. It provides a very interesting and thought provoking framework for thinking about public life and its contested nature.