Professor Mark Bevir is a member of the Department of Political Science at University of California, Berkeley. He was born in London and educated at the University of Exeter, U.K., where he got a BA (1st Class), and the University of Oxford, UK where he was awarded a DPhil. Before moving to Berkeley, he worked at the University of Madras, India, and University of Newcastle, UK. He has held visiting positions in Australia, Finland, France, U.K., and the U.S. Currently he is co-convener of the Interpretive Political Science specialist group of the Political Studies Association and President of the Society for the Philosophy of History.
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Description
I. What is Governance? II. The Concepts Accountability Bureaucracy Capacity Center-local relations Collaborative governance Collective action problem Communitarianism Co-ordination Corporatism Decentralization Dialogic policy-making Differentiated polity Enabling state Environmental governance Evidence-based policy Global governance Globalization Good governance Governance Indicators Hierarchy Implementation Incrementalism Institutionalism Interdependence Local governance Managing networks Market Marketization Metagovernance Multi-level governance Network New public management Participatory democracy Pluralism Policy cycle Policy network Public-private partnerships Rational choice theory Regionalism Regulation Regulation theory Representative democracy Rule of law Social capital Social constructivism Social inclusion Sovereignty State Systems theory Transnationalism
'A comprehensive, multidisciplinary examination of the concepts embodied in governance and their wide-ranging applications and implications. An important read and reference for students and academics in the social sciences, particularly those engaged in public policy studies' - Professor Carolyn J. Heinrich, University of Wisconsin-Madison 'An authoritative short survey for which students and teachers alike will be profoundly grateful' - Professor Rod Rhodes, University of Tasmania and Australian National University 'Students of governance will welcome this book given the explosion of literature in the field. It provides a quick guide to key concepts and ideas but does so with considerable originality. We are offered not just a review of well -established positrions but a distinctive take on the governance debate' - Gerry Stoker, Professor of Governance, University of Southampton