Hardback
Handbook on Measuring Governance
Measuring governance has become an increasingly important feature of modern societies, with organisations and institutions expected to prove their worth by quantifying their activities and results. This unique Handbook maps historical developments, theoretical conceptions and key approaches, and summarises what is known about measuring governance from a variety of fields of practice.
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Critical Acclaim
Contributors
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Measuring governance has become an increasingly important feature of modern societies, with organisations and institutions expected to prove their worth by quantifying their activities and results. This unique Handbook maps historical developments, theoretical conceptions and key approaches, and summarises what is known about measuring governance from a variety of fields of practice.
Peter Triantafillou and Jenny M. Lewis bring together an array of leading international academics to examine how governance is measured across different policy sectors and levels of government. Chapters explore the sociological theory of measurement, the quality of collaborative governance processes, governance in public health care, and global development cooperation. The editors and contributors have combined theoretical thinking with empirical findings to support this comprehensive overview of measuring governance, providing a significant contribution to the ongoing discourse in this field.
This thought-provoking Handbook will appeal to public administration and public policy professionals, as well as business and government practitioners at a national and international level. It will also prove highly beneficial to students, academics and researchers in governance, social policy, business and management and political science.
Peter Triantafillou and Jenny M. Lewis bring together an array of leading international academics to examine how governance is measured across different policy sectors and levels of government. Chapters explore the sociological theory of measurement, the quality of collaborative governance processes, governance in public health care, and global development cooperation. The editors and contributors have combined theoretical thinking with empirical findings to support this comprehensive overview of measuring governance, providing a significant contribution to the ongoing discourse in this field.
This thought-provoking Handbook will appeal to public administration and public policy professionals, as well as business and government practitioners at a national and international level. It will also prove highly beneficial to students, academics and researchers in governance, social policy, business and management and political science.
Critical Acclaim
‘The Handbook on Measuring Governance offers an engaging, theoretically rich but accessible framework for understanding the relationship between measurement and governance. For anyone interested in steering the ship of state, Triantafillou and Lewis offer a deeply-researched one-stop shop for understanding the theory, history, and implications of one of the central tools of governance.’
– Donald Moynihan, Georgetown University, US
– Donald Moynihan, Georgetown University, US
Contributors
Contributors include: Niklas Andreas Andersen, Dorte Caswell, Germano Araujo Coelho, Lorenzo Costumato, Peter Dahler-Larsen, Sorin Dan, Scott Douglas, Anders Ejrnæs, Katja Freistein, Radhika Gorur, Cosmo Howard, Marianne Kneuer, Joop Koppenjan, Andreas Hagedorn Krogh, Flemming Larsen, Jenny M Lewis, Peter Lloyd-Sherlock, Margit Malmmose, Sjors Overman, Stephen Peckham, Guy B Peters, Emma Ropes, Fabiana da Cunha Saddi, Andrea Bonomi Savignon, Fabiana Scalabrini, Isabel Rocha de Siqueira, Jacob Torfing, Peter Triantafillou, Wouter Vandenabeele, Timo Walter