The concept of `governance′ has become a central catchword across the social and political sciences. In
Governing and Governance , Jan Kooiman revisits and develops his seminal work in the field to map and demonstrate the utility of a sociopolitical perspective to our understanding of contemporary forms of governing, governance and governability.
A central underlying theme of the book is the notion of governance as a process of interaction between different societal and political actors and the growing interdependencies between the two as modern societies become ever more complex, dynamic and diverse.
Drawing upon a wide range of interdisciplinary insights, the book advances a comprehensive conceptual framework that seeks to capture the different elements, modes and orders of governing and governance. A series of useful distinctions are employed, for example, between self, `co′, and hierarchical modes, and between first, second, or meta orders to illustrate the many different structures and levels of modern governance today.
Theoretically rich and illuminating, Governing and Governance will be essential reading for all students and academics across the social and political sciences, public management and public administration.
Table of Content
PART ONE: GOVERNANCE AS INTERACTION
Setting the Stage
Interaction
PART TWO: ELEMENTS OF GOVERNING
Governing Images
Governing Instrumentation
Governing Action
PART THREE: MODES OF GOVERNANCE
Self-Governance
Co Governance
Hierarchical Governance
PART FOUR: ORDERS OF GOVERNANCE
Problems and Opportunities (First-Order Governance)
Institutions (Second-Order Governance)
Meta (Third-Order Governance)
PART FIVE: GOVERNANCE AND GOVERNABILITY
Society, Governance and Governability
Interactions, Governance and Governability