In the never-ending, and now more important than ever, effort to do more-with-less, a new initiative has come out of Whitehall: OneTotalLocalPlace. There have been quite a number of initiatives that have been focussed on getting the best value for money our of local spending. These have included: – Local Strategic Partnerships (LSPs) – these […]
Gordon Brown’s Letters
I detest even having to blog about this – the Sun’s manipulation of a grieving mother of a dead British soldier today is disgusting. But, let’s be very clear. Gordon Brown lost the sight in one eye when he was a kid, playing Rugby. The sight in his other eye is adequate, but not brilliant.
Theories of Performance – the book: coming soon.
My new book on ‘Theories of Performance’, which has come out of my ESRC Public Services Programme Fellowship – is more or less finished, bar some minor edits. I’ve added a new page (ToP Book – see tab above right) which has the contents, a description and some comments from colleagues who have read the […]
What sort of crisis is public management in?
I’ve just been discussing with a colleague what sort of crisis we are in and what the effects for Public Management Reform are likely to be. Lots of people are discussing what the financial crisis means for public services and public management, without stepping back to think about what sort of crisis the public sector […]
The Financial Crisis: How Economists Went Astray
from Professor Geoffrey M. Hodgson Two Nobel Laureates and over 2000 Signatories Uphold that Economists have Mistaken Mathematical Beauty for Economic Truth
BNP Supports Polish Pilots?
Today’s controversy over the far-right British National Party using images from the British Armed Forces to promote themselves has one rather ironic element. The BNP has featured the Spitfire on their literature as an symbol of the Battle of Britain – the air clash between the UK and Germany at the start of the war.
Balls takes his ball away
Gordon Brown put reinforcing parliamentary accountability at the heart of his premiership. One major change was to involve parliament in the appointment of senior public officials.
MPs Expenses – the missing mortgage money issue
So – MPs expenses are back, but this time with a slightly more complex plot. Former civil servant Sir Thomas Legg has been accused of retrospective re-writing of the rules in calling on MPs to repay anything above certain set limits for things like cleaning their second homes.
PS – Eye Witness: Gordon’s seemed fine to me
I sat next to Gordon Brown at the Chequers seminar (Sat 10/10/09) as he he took copious notes – he was clearly having no problem writing, so I don’t know what all the fuss is over his eyesight?
Chequers, mate?
I almost didn’t get to Chequers (the Prime Ministers country residence) on Saturday for a seminar on “Equality, Fairness and Responsibility in the Post-Crisis Society” convened by the PM and chaired by Ed Miliband.
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