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Journal ArticleDOI

Ungovernability: Is There Fire behind the Smoke?:

Richard Rose
- 01 Sep 1979 - 
- Vol. 27, Iss: 3, pp 351-370
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors define the threat to governability as the prospect of a fully legitimate government losing its effectiveness, losing popular consent, or both, and argue that a modern Western society can no more do without political authority than it could do without money.
Abstract
Ungovernability is a catchword of the moment, but analytically the term is a nonsense. A modern Western society can no more do without political authority than it could do without money. This paper defines the supposed threat to governability as the prospect of a fully legitimate government losing its effectiveness, losing popular consent, or both. One threat to effectiveness is an imbalance of resources, with the fiscal dividend of growth failing to keep up with the inertia growth in the costs of public policy. Another is an accumulation of government organizations, losing efficiency by increasing costs of co-ordination and losing effectiveness by adopting contradictory objectives or ends without known means. Authority is only seriously jeopardized by citizens growing increasingly indifferent to an ineffectual government, turning their backs on government and relying upon other major institutions of society to provide for their needs.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wicked Problems: Implications for Public Policy and Management

TL;DR: The concept of "wicked problems" has attracted increasing focus in policy research, but the implications for public organizations have received less attention as mentioned in this paper. But the main organizational and cognitive dimensions emerging from the research literature on wicked problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delivering joined–up government in the UK: dimensions, issues and problems

TL;DR: In the UK, joined-up government (JUG) was a central part of the first Blair government's programme for public sector reform and remains a pivotal, if more muted, feature of the second term as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Policy Accumulation and the Democratic Responsiveness Trap

TL;DR: The authors argue that the stability of democratic systems will crucially depend on their ability to make policy accumulation more sustainable, and they argue that policy accumulation undermines the pursuit of evidence-based public policy, because it threatens our ability to evaluate the increasingly complex interactions within growing policy mixes.
Book

Comparative Governance: Rediscovering the Functional Dimension of Governing

TL;DR: Peters and Pierre as mentioned in this paper propose a new framework for comparative analysis of governance, arguing that government remains a central actor in governance, and articulating the functionalist dimension of governance they show how goal setting, resource mobilization, decision-making, implementation and feedback can be performed by a combination of different types of actors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Overload, Ungovernability and Delegitimation: The Theories and the British Case

TL;DR: The concept of "overload" was introduced into the vocabulary of political science in 1975, in two publications which appeared almost simultaneously in the United States and Britain this paper, by Michel Crozier and Anthony King.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Postindustrial Politics: How Benign Will It Be?

TL;DR: The concept of post-industrial society was introduced by Daniel Bell as a model of society comparable to, but significantly different from, models of industrial and agrarian society as discussed by the authors.
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Public organization and the waning of the welfare state: a research perspective*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that organizational studies may offer a significant contribution to the successful management of the macro-societal transition process if they will systematically relate their own work to substantive policy studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

American Democracy Reconsidered: Part I

TL;DR: Bandyopadhyay as mentioned in this paper examined some of the main characteristics of the American system of urban government today and the concepts of democracy that inform it, and posed the question "Is it democratic?" rather than "is it bad?" in the Brycean sense.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic Tendencies in the Authority of Regimes

Richard Rose
- 01 Jul 1969 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors differentiate among the types of authority of a regime, analyze differences in dynamic changes in authority, and propose hypotheses specifying influences on the ability of the regime's leaders to obtain support and compliance from its nominal population.