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This collection of essays in political sociology and public policy contests some of the fundamental features of the contemporary State as it is manifested in Australia. It explores themes such as the development of the complex interventionist State, characterised by the proliferation of its activities to encompass virtually every feature of its subjects' daily lives and functioning as a central site of struggle over the distribution of social, economic, political and cultural resources. It also examines the impact of the so-called new social movements - the women's movement, the various multiracial and multicultural movements, and the environmental movement - which make new claims on the democratisation of the distribution of resources, and investigates the impact on the State of the pressure for economic 'restructuring' arising from the new terms of competition within a global economy in recession.
In tracing the links between these themes,
Bureaucrats, Technocrats, Femocrats makes a major contribution to a critical tradition of writing and analysis in public administration.
Sommario
Acknowledgements
IntroductionPART I: ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM AND THE AUSTRALIAN STATE IN THE 1980s
1. Administrative reform and management improvement
2. The concept of public management
3. Democratisation and the administrative state
PART II: FEMOCRATS AND THE AUSTRALIAN STATE
4. Are femocrats a class of their own?
5. Dilemmas for femocracy
PART III: RESTRUCTURING AND THE CRISIS OF THE WELFARE STATE
6. Restructuring and Australian public policy
7. Feminism and the 'crisis' of the welfare state
8. The politics of discourse and the politics of the state
Appendix A
Appendix B
Bibliography
Index
Info autore
Anna Yeatman teaches sociology at Flinders University and frequently acts as a consultant to the public sector on program and policy evaluation. Among the collections to which she has contributed is
Feminist Challenges. She is the author of
Feminism, Post Modernism and Social Science (forthcoming).