Public administration and decision-aiding software : improving procedure and substance
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Public administration and decision-aiding software : improving procedure and substance
(New directions in information management, no. 23)
Greenwood Press, 1990
Available at 12 libraries
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  Saga
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  Kumamoto
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  Miyazaki
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Note
"Prepared under the auspices of the Policy Studies Organization."
Includes bibliographical references (p. 241-247) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This contributed volume offers a summary of the latest ideas and applications concerning decision making software, as applied to administrative decision making and public policy-making. Stuart Nagel, the editor of this work, defines the essence of decision-aiding software to be software that is designed to enable users to process a set of (1) goals to be achieved, (2) alternatives available for achieving them, and (3) relations between goals and alternatives in order to choose the best alternative, combination, allocation, or predictive decision-rule. Containing contributions from both practitioners and theorists, this book should be of immediate value to those professionals involved in the field of public administration.
The book is organized in terms of the major fields of public administration, which have been divided into staff/procedural activities, and into line/substantive activities. The first part of the book deals with cross-cutting procedures, including organization theory, policy analysis, and financial management. The second part deals with substantive chapters, including criminal justice, health, environmental-energy, and transportation as administrative fields. The third part of the book involves chapters which combine procedures and substance. It includes developmental policy, with chapters emphasizing the perspectives of people from developing countries toward the relevance of computers and decision-aiding software. It also includes the perspective of people from more developed countries trying to apply policy analysis methods to developmental policy. The third part also deals with public administration education. It emphasizes data banks that are available through telecommunications systems to aid in teaching various aspects of public administration procedures and substance. This book should be of interest to public administrators and scholars of the field.
Table of Contents
Introduction I: Staff or Procedural Activities (A) General Matters High-Tech Effects: A Model for Research on Microcomputers in Public Organizations by Donald F. Norris and Lyke Thompson (B) Public Policy Making The Uses of Models in Legislative Planning by Werner Robert Svoboda Developing Support Systems for High-Level Policy Making by Dov Te'eni Developing Microcomputer Problem-Solving Applications by John F. Sacco and John W. Ostrowski (C) Financial Management The Growing Role of Computers in U.S. Federal Tax Compliance and Administration by William J. Turnier A Theory of Rational and Feasible Budget Allocation by Stuart S. Nagel Line or Substance Activities Criminal Justice Computerization in the Prosecution Service in Scotland by Robert G. Donaldson A Database for Sentencing by Dana van der Merwe (E) Health Care Choosing Among Alternative Facility Locations by Ronald E. Martin and R. Eric Greene Health Care Innovation and Decision-Aiding Software by Miriam K. Mills (F) Environmental Protection Energy Program Evaluation Using P/G% Decision-Aiding Software by Thomas S. Stanton Incentives, MCDM, and Environmental Protection by Robert Nagel Transportation Computer-Aided Assessment for Transportation Policies by Peter J. Mackie, Tony D. May, Alan D. Pearman, and David Simon Procedure and Substance Combined Developmental Administration and Policy Documentation and Computers in Third World Development by John Baiden Amissah Improving Public Policy Toward and Within Developing Countries by Stuart S. Nagel Teaching Telecommunications for Public Administration Education by Michael L. Vasu and Alex N. Pattakos Selected Bibliography Name Index Subject Index
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