CHF 44.50

Regulation of Standards in British Public Life
Doing the Right Thing?

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks

Description

Read more

Informationen zum Autor David Hine is Official Tutorial Fellow in Politics at Christ Church, University of Oxford Gillian Peele is Official Fellow and Tutor in Politics at Lady Margaret Hall, University of Oxford Klappentext One of the most profound changes in British public life over the last twenty years has been the increasing concern with probity and standards. Some of that concern has been the product of scandals such as the cash for questions affair and the expenses scandal; some of it reflects the erosion of trust in politicians and in traditional approaches to government and administration. The book analyses the way new machinery and new rules have been put in place in different parts of the public sector as a protection against corruption and conflict of interest and as a spur to raising standards. It provides the first full-length treatment of the evolving integrity agenda in the United Kingdom. The book traces the impact of the Committee on Standards in Public Life which set out the Nolan principles in its first report in 1995 and examines how those principles have been applied in different sectors - Parliament, the executive, the civil service, local government and the devolved governments - and how they have been applied to the problems of party funding and lobbying. Finally, it assesses the changing level of support for the Committee's mission and the impact of its work both on the quality of public life itself and on public confidence. Zusammenfassung This is an analysis of the revolution of the last two decades that has built an extensive new regulatory apparatus governing British public ethics. The book sets the new machinery in the wider institutional framework of British government. Its main purpose is to understand the dilemmas of regulatory design that have emerged in each area examined. -- . Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Regulating public ethics in the United Kingdom1. Building integrity machinery: the origins 2. Building integrity machinery: the Committee on Standards in Public Life 3. The House of Commons: the slow erosion of self-regulation 4. IPSA: the costs and benefits of external regulation 5. Reluctant reform in the House of Lords 6. Regulating ethics at the centre: the Ministerial Code 7. Whitehall Wars: keeping politics out of the civil service 8. Revolving doors and regulated afterlives: post-employment for ministers and civil servants 9. Getting to grips with lobbies: regulated office-holders, unregulated lobbies 10. The Electoral Commission and party funding 11. Regulation of ethics in local government 12. Regulation beyond the centre: ethics in Edinburgh, Cardiff and BelfastConclusion: Standards, office-holders and public opinion: higher standards, lower credibility?BibliographyIndex...

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.