The customer problem in the public sector appears when too many processes are in place and staff volumes are too large to adapt to sudden change. As situations evolve and solutions are required, public managers are faced with an overload of information for decision-making, as normal day-to-day policy is overlooked to accommodate management by crisis. Generally, emergency situations call for effective steps to be taken, constrained by short time frames and a dispersed public workforce.
Managing teams require structure in their response to an evolving crises, which is generally a difficult position to attain when information and resources are limited. Protocol and response plans are only activated in extreme crises, leaving a gap in response when overload has been reached but is not within the stipulated margins. Recognition at this stage is important if successful outcomes are to be achieved. This book proposes an 8-point model, which it labels the DALI Model, for responding to these situations, to simplify and synthesize decision-making processes.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
This book details an approach to dealing with crisis situations and rapid change in the public sector using an eight-point model, the DALI model, to help public sector organizations efficiently use resources while managing change. Based on a qualitative research study, the model examines internal staff processes to produce a shift and includes the customer perspective. It focuses on connection, capacity, governance, standards, networks, policy, training, and process improvement and discusses theoretical models of public sector responses to radical change; case studies of decision-making in response to rapid change, namely Malta's response to the Libya crisis, fire and rescue restructuring in Scotland, and an emergency department overload in Malta, and application of the model to them; and the role of timing, reform, productivity, and preparedness. -- Annotation (c)2019 * (protoview.com) *
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-1-78973-167-5 (9781789731675)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Dr. Rebecca Dalli Gonza (PhD) is a lecturer at the Department for Construction and Property Management. She is a registered and certified civil engineer by the Chamber of Architects, Malta, and founded a business advisory service to assist businesses in taking strategic decisions in 2013.
Dr. Simon Grima (PhD) is the Head of the Insurance Department and a Senior Lecturer at the University of Malta. He served as the President of the Malta Association of Risk Management (MARM) and Malta Association of Compliance, and has over 25 years of experience in in Financial Services, Internal Controls, Investments and IT.
Autor*in
University of Malta, Malta
Herausgeber*in
University of Malta, Malta
Figures and tables Abbreviations
1. Introduction - Setting a Standard for Service
2. Public Sector Responses to Radical Change: An Analysis of Theoretical Models
3. Public Sector Cases: Decision-Making and Response
4. The Results
5. Conclusions and Reflections
Appendix
Bibliography