Postmodern Public Administration: Toward DiscourseSAGE Publications, 1995 - 175 páginas Charles J Fox and Hugh T Miller challenge current thinking about public policy and administration in the light of the postmodern condition. In this book existing and accepted theories such as public management doctrines, constitutionalism and communitarianism are rejected in favour of constructing a discourse theory of public administration. The book also provides an invaluable, thorough and clear review of the doctrines and philosophies that have to date dominated the field. |
Dentro del libro
25 páginas coinciden con philosophy en este libro.
Página 164
¿Dónde está el resto de este libro?
Resultados 1-3 de 25
Contenido
A New Approach to Democratic Governance | 3 |
Orthodoxy and Its Alternatives | 14 |
Discourse Theory | 73 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 1 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
abstract action adhocracies affirm agencies agonistic alternative argument articulated atomistic attention authentic discourse behavior Blacksburg Blacksburg manifesto body-subject bureaucracy Chapter citizen panel citizenry claims communitarian concept consciousness constitutional constructivism context conversation corporatist critique democracy democratic deterministic develop discourse theory dominant epiphenomenal ethics few-talk formation foundationalism Frankfurt School Giddens groups Habermas human hyperreality ideal incommensurability individual insincere institutionalism institutions interaction issues language games legitimacy legitimate lifeworld loop model many-talk meaning metanarrative metaphor modern monologic nascent neotribalism norms organizations orthodoxy paradigm phenomenological philosophy Poletown policy discourse policy networks political postmodern conditions potential probabilism probabilistic problem problematic public administration public energy field public interest public policy question rational reality recursive practices reform reified representative democracy Rohr rules self-referential sense situation situation-regarding intentionality some-talk speech acts standpoint Stivers structuration theory substantive contribution symbols thought tion transcend validity warrants for discourse