Postmodern Public Policy introduces new ways of investigating the urgent difficulties confronting the public sector. The second half of the twentieth century saw approaches to public administration, public policy, and public management dominated by technical-instrumental thought that aspired to neutrality, objectivity, and managerialism. This form of social science has contributed to a public sector where policy debates have been reduced to 'bumper-sticker’ slogans, a citizenry largely alienated and distant from government, and analysis that ignores history and context and eschews the lived experiences of actual people. Hugh T. Miller brings together the latest thinking from epistemology, evolutionary theory, and discourse theory in an accessible and useful manner to emphasize how a postmodern approach offers the possibility of well-considered, pragmatic solutions grounded in political pluralism and social interaction between public service professionals and community members.
Spis treści
Preface
Brief of the Argument
Plan of the Book
Acknowledgments
1. The System and its Nemesis
Encroachments
Hyperrationality
2. The Mutation of Meaning
Some Examples of the Disconnect
The Instability of Language
3. Idea Contagion
Memetics
Memetics and Postmodernism
The Prospects for Rational Sorting
4. Contextualism
Situation and Intentionality
Practical Discourse
A Perspective on Change
5. Policy Inquiry
Epistemology as Abstract Univeralism
Facts Are Word-Shaped Things
Self-Referential Systems
Perspectival Small t Truth
6. Democratic Discourse
The End of Universals?
Monologic Discourse: An Oxymoron
Vibrant Pluralism
An Ethos of Discourse
References
Index
O autorze
Hugh T. Miller is Professor and Director of the School of Public Administration at Florida Atlantic University. He has published several books, including
These Things Happen: Stories from the Public Sector (coedited with Mohamad G. Alkadry);
Postmodernism, 'Reality, ’ and Public Administration: A Discourse (coedited with Charles J. Fox); and
Postmodern Public Administration: Toward Discourse (coauthored with Charles J. Fox).