ABSTRACT

How can public administration (P.A.) nudge government to govern fundamentally better in terms of policy? How critical is P.A. contemplation and nudges – prods, shoves or hammer blows - to government-in-context?

In this book, David John Farmer argues that government-in-context refers to government-in-totality, to what governs even if not called government and to what constrains government action. Constricting contextual features are infiltration, exfiltration and post-truth, raising questions relating to democracy. Infiltration into government is the action of gaining access that benefits big corporations, their owners and billionaires; findings are that it also mal-nudges government action through such elements as big money, lobbying, tax breaks and embrace of the free market. Reacting to factors like growing income inequality, what is explained as exfiltration occurs for middle- and lower-income people. Post-truth is noted as the Oxford Dictionary’s word of the year for 2016, describing people concerned less with truths than with opinions. The book analyzes three practical "hammer blow" and 18 "shove" nudges to contradict the mal-nudges.

Beyond Public Administration will be of interest to P.A. scholars and graduate students, more specifically those interested in critical, normative, or interpretive scholarship focused on various aspects of P.A. theory, governance, and practical management.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

Public Administration in Governmentality

A Bigger Helper

chapter 3|15 pages

Contemplation and Beyond

The Bigger Picture

chapter 4|11 pages

Context

Infiltration

chapter 5|13 pages

Context

Exfiltration

chapter 6|10 pages

Context

Post-Truth

chapter 7|27 pages

Government-in-Context

Practical Nudges

chapter 8|9 pages

Epilogue