Description
The book provides a comprehensive and up-to-date introduction to key issues and contemporary debates in public policy. The author draws on a wide range of examples from around the world to develop a framework for understanding the way social contexts, policy histories and institutional pathways generate opportunities. Separate chapters focus on public action, context, discourse, institutional pathways, networks, organizations, governance, citizen engagement and accountability.
Clearly-written and compelling, this will be essential reading for upper-level undergraduate students taking courses in public policy, social policy, environmental studies, health studies, European studies and development.
About the Author
Mark Considine is Professor and Director at the Centre for Public Policy, University of Melbourne.
Reviews
'Mark Considine has written an important contribution to the literature on public policy that will be useful to academics and practitioners alike. He demonstrates the importance of the policy process and provides insights into policy-making that extend our understanding of both politics and policy.'
Professor B. Guy Peters, Department of Political Science, University of Pittsburgh
'Original and readable, Making Public Policy is a carefully constructed and cohesive argument for intelligent and theoretically informed policy analysis.'
Dr Mike Smith, Institute of Local Government Studies, University of Birmingham
'Analytically...this is a rich, challenging and intellectually stimulating contribution to the burgeoning literature on making public policy.'
Public Administration
Book Information
ISBN 9780745627533
Author Mark Considine
Format Hardback
Page Count 262
Imprint Polity Press
Publisher John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Weight(grams) 508g
Dimensions(mm) 234mm * 152mm * 25mm