Hyper-active Governance: How Governments Manage the Politics of Expertise (Cambridge Studies in Comparative Public Policy)

Hyper-active Governance: How Governments Manage the Politics of Expertise (Cambridge Studies in Comparative Public Policy)

by Matthew Wood (Author)

Synopsis

Hyper-active Governance is a new way of thinking about governing that puts debates over expertise at the heart. Contemporary governing requires delegation to experts, but also increases demands for political accountability. In this context, politicians and experts work together under political stress to adopt different governing relationships that appear more 'hands-off' or 'hands-on'. These approaches often serve to displace profound social and economic crises. Only a genuinely collaborative approach to governing, with an inclusive approach to expertise, can create democratically legitimate and effective governance in our accelerating world. Using detailed case studies and global datasets in various policy areas including medicines, flooding, water resources, central banking and electoral administration, the book develops a new typology of modes of governing. Drawing from innovative social theory, it breathes new life into debates about expert forms of governance and how to achieve real paradigm shifts in how we govern our increasingly hyper-active world.

$133.85

Quantity

20 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 27 Jun 2019

ISBN 10: 1108492614
ISBN 13: 9781108492614
Book Overview: The concept of Hyper-active Governance shows how politicians govern complex networks, in light of the politicisation of expertise.

Media Reviews
Hyper-active Governance makes a timely intervention in contemporary debates about the place of expertise in policymaking. This book draws on detailed case studies to question assumptions about the dynamics of technocratic depoliticisation. It offers a novel framework through which to understand how knowledge and expertise are legitimated in the context of hyper-mediatization and declining trust. It makes important reading for all scholars interested in the relationship between governance and expertise. John Boswell, Associate Professor in Politics, University of Southampton
Author Bio
Matthew Wood is Lecturer in Politics and Deputy Director of the Crick Centre at The University of Sheffield. His work focuses on the authority and legitimacy of experts in the field of Governance and Public Policy, and he currently holds an ESRC Future Research Leaders Fellowship 2015-18. His doctoral dissertation (2014) received the Department of Politics' Andrew Gamble prize for best thesis, and his article 'Paradoxical Politics' has recently been awarded the Harrison Prize for best article in Political Studies (2016). He has held visiting fellowships at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, University of Mainz, University of Canberra and Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico.