Public Service Accountability: Rekindling a Debate

Public Service Accountability: Rekindling a Debate

by Laurence Ferry (Author), Peter Murphy (Author), Kirsten Greenhalgh (Author), Russ Glennon (Author)

Synopsis

How we manage public services and hold them to account is critically important. Yet austerity, recent changes to accountability frameworks, and the loss of the Audit Commission have created a huge deficit in our understanding of how well services are delivered. The time is thus right to re-examine the state of our vital public services, as well as how we can make them more accountable. This book reopens the debate on what accountability means and provides unique insights into an increasingly complex organizational landscape. It presents a new and innovative way of evaluating public services that should be of use to academics and public servants alike. Synthesising empirical work across local government, health and social care, the police, and fire services, this book also explores the relationship between financial and performance accountability and makes the case for the need for a distinctive sense of public service accountability.

$80.62

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 159
Edition: 1st ed. 2019
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Published: 27 Jul 2018

ISBN 10: 3319933833
ISBN 13: 9783319933832

Author Bio
Peter Murphy is Professor of Public Policy and Management at Nottingham Business School, UK. He was a senior civil servant and the chief executive of a local authority.

Laurence Ferry is Professor of Accounting at Durham University, UK. He is a well-recognised international expert in public financial management.
Russ Glennon is a Senior Lecturer in management and leadership at Nottingham Business School, Nottingham Trent University, UK, and specialises in public policy and management.
Kirsten Greenhalgh is Associate Professor of Accounting at Nottingham University Business School, UK, and has a professional background in management accounting in the NHS and local government.