
Regulation Inside Government
Waste-Watchers, Quality Police, and Sleazebusters
Oxford University Press
Published on 27. May 1999
Book
Hardback
282 pages
978-0-19-828099-6 (ISBN)
Description
Regulation Inside Government analyses the army of inspectors, auditors, grievance-chasers, standard-setters and other bodies overseeing contemporary public organizations. Based on an unprecedented two-year inside study of British government by a team of leading scholars, this book provides an original analytical perspective on regulation within government. The book begins by examining the size of internal government regulation to reveal a structure comparable in size to government regulation of business. The book then goes on to show how internal government regulation grew in size despite the fact that public bureaucracy elsewhere were being sharply cutback.
Given the limitations of orthodox constitutional checks on executive government, the courts and elected members of the legislature, regulation inside government deserves more attention than it has hitherto received. As one of the first comprehensive accounts of regulation inside government, this book begins to fill the gap.
Given the limitations of orthodox constitutional checks on executive government, the courts and elected members of the legislature, regulation inside government deserves more attention than it has hitherto received. As one of the first comprehensive accounts of regulation inside government, this book begins to fill the gap.
Reviews / Votes
Hood and colleagues develop a single, coherent analysis around the idea of relational distance and formality and then apply it to a range of policy areas...More thematic and covering a wide range of substantive cases, Hood and colleagues provide and insightful analysis and a clear picture of the way the UK state is changing. * British Politics Group Newsletter, Summer 2001 *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 222 mm
Width: 145 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
535 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-828099-6 (9780198280996)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
CHRISTOPHER HOOD is a Professor of Public Administration and Public Policy at London School of Economics.
OLIVER JAMES is a Lecturer in Politics at Exeter University.
GEORGE JONES is Professor of Government at London School of Economics.
COLIN SCOTT is Lecturer in Law at London School of Economics.
TONY TRAVERS is Director of the London Group at London School of Economics.
OLIVER JAMES is a Lecturer in Politics at Exeter University.
GEORGE JONES is Professor of Government at London School of Economics.
COLIN SCOTT is Lecturer in Law at London School of Economics.
TONY TRAVERS is Director of the London Group at London School of Economics.
Author
Professor of Public Administration and Public PolicyProfessor of Public Administration and Public Policy, London School of Economics
Lecturer in PoliticsLecturer in Politics, Exeter University
Professor of GovernmentProfessor of Government, London School of Economics
Lecturer in LawLecturer in Law, London School of Economics
Director of the London GroupDirector of the London Group, London School of Economics
Content
Introduction ; PART1: INTRODUCING AND ANALYSING REGULATION INSIDE GOVERNMENT ; 1. A Regulatory State inside the State? ; 2. Running the Ruler over Regulation inside Government ; 3. Regulation in Government: Tools, Characteristics, and Behaviour ; PART 2: FIVE DOMAINS OF REGULATION INSIDE GOVERNMENT ; 4. Regulating Village Life in Central Government ; 5. Mirror Image or Double Whammy? Regulation and Local Government ; 6. All Bark, No Bite? The Regulation of Prisons in England and Wales ; 7. From Secret Garden to Reign of Terror? The Regulation of State Schools in England ; 8. Eurocratic Regulation ; PART 3: THE OVERALL PATTERN ; 9. Regulation in Government and the New Public Management ; 10. Regulating the Regulators: Policies for Reform ; Appendices ; References ; Index