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Putting Citizens First: Engagement in Policy and Service Delivery for the 21st Century

TLDR
In this article, the authors explore the ways in which governments are putting citizens first in their policy-making endeavours, and the challenges and demands such an approach will demand, and are they prepared to commit the time and resources to ensure genuine engagement takes place and that citizens interests are considered foremost.
Abstract
This book explores the ways in which governments are putting citizens first in their policy-making endeavours. Making citizens the focus of policy interventions and involving them in the delivery and design is for many governments a normative ideal; it is a worthy objective and sounds easy to achieve. But the reality is that putting citizens at the centre of policy-making is hard and confronting. Are governments really serious in their ambitions to put citizens first? Are they prepared for the challenges and demands such an approach will demand? Are they prepared to commit the time and resources to ensure genuine engagement takes place and that citizens’ interests are considered foremost? And, more importantly, are governments prepared for the trade-offs, risks and loss of control such citizen-centric approaches will inevitably involve? The book is divided into five parts: setting the scene: The evolving landscape for citizen engagement drivers for change: Innovations in citizen-centric governance case studies in land management and Indigenous empowerment case studies in fostering community engagement and connectedness case studies engaging with information technology and new media. While some chapters question how far governments can go in engaging with citizens, many point to successful examples of actual engagement that enhanced policy experiences and improved service delivery. The various authors make clear that citizen engagement is not restricted to the domain of service delivery, but if taken seriously affects the ways governments conduct their activities across all agencies. The implications are enormous, but the benefits to public policy may be enormous too.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Gift Relationship

Parita Mukta
- 06 Apr 2011 - 
TL;DR: Richard Titmuss’s book The Gift Relationship became a foundational text on the ethics and organisational principles governing healthcare and social policy and continues to provoke and engage us to explore more deeply how each society decides how it meets the health needs of its citizens.
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The changing landscape of disaster volunteering: opportunities, responses and gaps in Australia

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review major forces and trends impacting on disaster volunteering, highlighting four key developments: the growth of more diverse and episodic volunteering styles, the impact of new communications technology, greater private sector involvement and growing government expectations of and intervention in the voluntary sector.
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The Meta Co-production of Community Outcomes: Towards a Citizens’ Capabilities Approach

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that community outcomes result from a sum of peer production, co-production and inter-organizational collaboration processes promoted and activated at individual, organizational and network level across the public, third and private sectors.
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‘The greatest loss was a loss of our history’: natural disasters, marginalised identities and sites of memory

TL;DR: This article explored the ways in which social marginality is experienced by sexual minorities during disasters as a result of threats to sites of lesbian and gay memory, and argued that disaster impacts may include the loss of sites of memory that inform and underpin the formation and maintenance of marginalised identities.
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Shared responsibility: the who, what and how

TL;DR: The National Strategy for Disaster Resilience (NSDR) as discussed by the authors is the overarching policy framework for disaster risk management and aims to create resilient communities through an emphasis on shared responsibility and empowerment.
References
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Book

Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness

TL;DR: In Nudge as discussed by the authors, Thaler and Sunstein argue that human beings are susceptible to various biases that can lead us to blunder and make bad decisions involving education, personal finance, health care, mortgages and credit cards, the family, and even the planet itself.
Book

Reinventing Government: How The Entrepreneurial Spirit Is Transforming The Public Sector

David Osborne, +1 more
TL;DR: Catalytic government as discussed by the authors steering rather than rowing community-owned government, empowering rather than serving competitive government, injecting competition into service delivery mission-driven government, transforming rule-driven organizations results-orinted government, meeting the needs of the customer, not the bureaucracy enterpirsing government, earning rather than spending anticipatory government, prevention rather than cure decentralized government.

Creating public value : strategic management in government

Mark H. Moore
TL;DR: In this paper, Mahoney and Sencer discuss the role of political management in public administration and the challenges of public leadership in a divided, uncertain and uncertain society, as well as the challenges faced by public managers and public management.
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Beyond Engagement and Participation: User and Community Coproduction of Public Services

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a conceptual framework for understanding the emerging role of user and community coproduction and present several case studies that illustrate how diff erent forms of coproduce have played out in practice.
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The New Governance: Practices and Processes for Stakeholder and Citizen Participation in the Work of Government

TL;DR: This paper assess the existing legal infrastructure authorizing public managers to use new governance processes and discuss a selection of quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial new governance process in international, federal, state, and local public institutions.