The handbook of federal government leadership and administration : transforming, performing, and innovating in a complex world
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Bibliographic Information
The handbook of federal government leadership and administration : transforming, performing, and innovating in a complex world
(American Society for Public Administration series in public administration and public policy)
Routledge, 2017
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Public management is context dependent, rather than generic. That may sound obvious, but in the late 1920s through the 1930s, a dominant strand of thought considered public administration to be a "single process," wherever practiced. Today by contrast, federal administration is distinguished from private enterprise, nonprofit management, and state and local governmental practices by the combined effects of its scope and scale; the constitutional separation of powers, federalism, and protection of individual rights; and administrative law requirements for stakeholder participation, representation, transparency, privacy, due process and other democratic-constitutional values. The Handbook of Federal Leadership and Administration is a state-of-the art guide to the unique features of federal administration, informed by the latest theoretical developments, research, and practical applications, and the leadership and management of federal agencies.
Written by "pracademics" with federal practitioners specifically in mind, the handbook is designed to bridge the gap between academic and applied public administration by identifying what resonates with practitioners as they search for usable theories and research findings to improve performance. Combining rigor and relevance in the study and practice of federal administration, it includes chapters on theory, history, reform initiatives, leadership, necessary skill sets, budgeting, power and influence, political embeddedness, change management, separated and shared executive, legislative, and judicial powers, effective communication, ethics, and emerging concepts and challenges. It will be essential reading for federal practitioners, scholars, and "pracademics" alike.
Table of Contents
1. The Bureaucratic Landscape: Origin and Implications for the Federal Leader
Patrick S. Malone
2. Federal Administrative Leadership in the American Political System
Robert F. Durant
3. Theory & Practice in Federal Government Executive Branch Leadership & Administration: Developing Rigorous Approaches to Effective Government
Bill Valdez
4. Leadership and Management: The Use of Distributed Power and Influence in a Changing Federal Government
Andrew Rahaman
5. Leadership Development: An Investment Necessary to Increase Federal Employee Engagement and Federal Government Productivity
Robert M. Tobias
6. Administering and Leading in the Federal Government: The Need for an Adaptive Leadership Approach for 21st Century Leaders
Ruth Zaplin and Bill Valdez
7. Leading with Integrity
Donald G. Zauderer
8. Communicating to Drive Engagement and Trust
Angelo Ioffreda
9. A Review of Federal Government Reform Initiatives since the Passage of the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993
Nancy Kingsbury
10. Change Management in Federal Government Organizations
Ruth S. Wagner
11. Leading in the Context of Constitutional Government
Joseph V. Kaplan
12. Understanding the Federal Budget: Where Policy Meets Money
Neile L. Miller
13. Emerging Challenges for Federal Government Leaders
Data as an Asset - Big Data: Lost in Space
Joyce Hunter
Workforce Analytics: Data-Driven Human Capital Management
Anita Blair
Cultivating Resilience: A Modern Day Organizational Imperative
David A. Bray and Charles R. Rath
Do's and Don'ts of Social Media in the Federal Government
Kim Mosser Knapp
The Entrepreneurial Species within the Federal Government Innovation Ecosystem
Avery Sen
by "Nielsen BookData"