ABSTRACT

This book explores innovations in public management, including establishing a corporate vision, strategizing an organization and change management.

Chapters provide a valuable frame of reference for the 21st-century manager of public services by assessing the renewal of existing practices such as strategic costing, performance management, digitization and procurement and innovations in management practices, including branding, Lean Management, resilience and risk management. The book suggests that, as the management of public services is imbued with financial, social, economic and political uncertainties, management needs to be flexible and responsive to new ideas and practices to fulfil its purpose. This book ultimately supports the reflective manager, those who think about their job and are open to new ideas on how their job can be done better, by revisiting existing practices and examining innovations in public management.

Enriched with real-life cases and thought-provoking discussion questions, this is the ideal textbook for reflective, open-minded advanced students of public management and actual, or aspiring, reflective managers in public services.

section one|11 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

section two|46 pages

Strategic positioning

chapter 2|16 pages

Managing with a vision

chapter 3|13 pages

Strategizing

At a new crossroads?

chapter 4|15 pages

Management of change

For better or worse?

section three|58 pages

Renewal of core practices

chapter 5|18 pages

From cost accounting to strategic cost management

The experience of Italian higher education

chapter 6|14 pages

Rethinking performance management

section four|67 pages

Innovations in management practices

chapter 9|15 pages

Brand orientation

Tensions and conflicts in public management

chapter 11|14 pages

Managing resilience

chapter 12|21 pages

The risks of risk management

section five|13 pages

The reflective manager in action

chapter 13|11 pages

Concluding comments

The reflective manager in action