ABSTRACT

Public Personnel Management has served as an essential, concise reader for public personnel and human resource management courses in the fields of public administration, political science, and public policy for more than 30 years. Since the first edition published in 1991, the book has provided professors and students alike with an in-depth look at cutting-edge developments beyond standard textbook coverage, to cultivate a broad understanding of the key management and policy issues facing public and nonprofit HRM today. Original chapters are written expressly for the text by leading public administration scholars, each focusing on specific and sometimes controversial concerns for public personnel management, such as social equity, labor relations, public employee rights, and the operation of nonprofits.

Now in an extensively revised seventh edition, Public Personnel Management presents new, original chapters to examine developments of interest to researchers and practitioners alike, including: new ways of working (NWW), remote work, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on public service workforces, work-life balance, patterns of discrimination and employees’ perceptions of fairness, affirmative action, generational differences in the workforce, and – as the field of public personnel management becomes more internationalized – chapters addressing human resource management across Europe and a chapter on NWW practices in Switzerland. These, together with other chapters, ensure that Public Personnel Management will remain a field-defining book for the next 30 years.

chapter 1|16 pages

Public Personnel Management

Its Significance for Government Performance

chapter 3|23 pages

New Ways of Working and Job Outcomes in Public Organizations

The Mutual Gains and Conflicting Outcomes Perspective

chapter 4|12 pages

Diversity, Social Equity, and Representative Bureaucracy

Talk versus Walk

chapter 6|11 pages

Affirmative Action and the Law

chapter 11|15 pages

Public Sector Unions

Demands, Emotions, and Behavior

chapter 14|20 pages

Telework in Government