Bureaucrats and Bleeding Hearts
Title | Bureaucrats and Bleeding Hearts PDF eBook |
Author | Tess Lea |
Publisher | UNSW Press |
Pages | 308 |
Release | 2008 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 9781921410185 |
"This is an anthropological study of the culture of public health governance in the Northern Territory of Australia. It asks what it takes to become a helping white bureau-professional in Australias post-colonial frontier - someone who passionately cares about and resolutely strives toward improved health for Indigenous people and how their determination to help is sustained in the face of a self-declared history of failure."--Provided by publisher.
Beyond White Guilt
Title | Beyond White Guilt PDF eBook |
Author | Sarah Maddison |
Publisher | ReadHowYouWant.com |
Pages | 338 |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 1459622618 |
Large Print.
Bureaucrats and Bleeding Hearts
Title | Bureaucrats and Bleeding Hearts PDF eBook |
Author | Tess Lea |
Publisher | |
Pages | 276 |
Release | 2008 |
Genre | Aboriginal Australians |
ISBN | 9781742230412 |
Bureaucrats and Bleeding Hearts takes you on an intimate journey into the lives of people armed with the task of ending Australian Aboriginal disadvantage in the frontier north of Australia. Taking a fresh look at longstanding issues, Lea examines the culture of bureaucracy, its need to create the look of action, how intelligent inhabitants uphold the apparatus of government even whilst they critique it, and how benevolent efforts to improve health have brought about unexpected co-dependencies and tragic failures. She paints a sympathetic yet discomforting portrait of those who, working on behalf of and for Aboriginal health, fiercely defend the ideas and principles that paradoxically reinstate the primary need for greater levels of government intervention.
Bureaucratic Intimacies
Title | Bureaucratic Intimacies PDF eBook |
Author | Elif M. Babül |
Publisher | Stanford University Press |
Pages | 307 |
Release | 2017-10-03 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 1503603393 |
Human rights are politically fraught in Turkey, provoking suspicion and scrutiny among government workers for their anti-establishment left-wing connotations. Nevertheless, with eyes worldwide trained on Turkish politics, and with accession to the European Union underway, Turkey's human rights record remains a key indicator of its governmental legitimacy. Bureaucratic Intimacies shows how government workers encounter human rights rhetoric through training programs and articulates the perils and promises of these encounters for the subjects and objects of Turkish governance. Drawing on years of participant observation in programs for police officers, judges and prosecutors, healthcare workers, and prison personnel, Elif M. Babül argues that the accession process does not always advance human rights. In casting rights as requirements for expertise and professionalism, training programs strip human rights of their radical valences, disassociating them from their political meanings within grassroots movements. Translation of human rights into a tool of good governance leads to competing understandings of what human rights should do, not necessarily to liberal, transparent, and accountable governmental practices. And even as translation renders human rights relevant for the everyday practices of government workers, it ultimately comes at a cost to the politics of human rights in Turkey.
The absurdity of bureaucracy
Title | The absurdity of bureaucracy PDF eBook |
Author | Nina Holm Vohnsen |
Publisher | Manchester University Press |
Pages | 330 |
Release | 2017-05-31 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 152610136X |
The absurdity of bureaucracy offers a humorous ethnographic account of policy implementation set in contemporary Danish bureaucracy. Taking the reader deep into the hallways of governmental administration and municipal caseworkers’ offices, the book sets out to explore what characterizes policy implementation as a mode of human agency. Using the notions of absurdity and sense-making as lenses through which to explore the dynamic relationship between a policy and its effects, the book reclaims ‘implementation studies’ for the qualitative sciences and emphasizes the existential dilemma that any policymaker and implementer must confront. Following step-by-step the planning and implementation of the randomized controlled trial, Active – Back Sooner, the book sets out to show that ‘going wrong’ is not a question of implementation failure but is in fact the only way in which implementation may happen.
Handbook of Teaching Public Administration
Title | Handbook of Teaching Public Administration PDF eBook |
Author | Bottom, Karin A. |
Publisher | Edward Elgar Publishing |
Pages | 375 |
Release | 2022-06-21 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 1800375697 |
Compiling the experience and expertise of over 50 leading international scholars, this Handbook of Teaching Public Administration offers critical insights into the questions, issues, and challenges raised by teaching practitioners and aspiring professionals. Its global scope provides a comprehensive overview of the diversity of current practice in teaching public administration.
Wild Policy
Title | Wild Policy PDF eBook |
Author | Tess Lea |
Publisher | Stanford University Press |
Pages | 273 |
Release | 2020-07-14 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1503612678 |
Can there be good social policy? This book describes what happens to Indigenous policy when it targets the supposedly 'wild people' of regional and remote Australia. Tess Lea explores naturalized policy: policy unplugged, gone live, ramifying in everyday life, to show that it is policies that are wild, not the people being targeted. Lea turns the notion of unruliness on its head to reveal a policy-driven world dominated by short term political interests and their erratic, irrational effects, and by the less obvious protection of long-term interests in resource extraction and the liberal settler lifestyles this sustains. Wild Policy argues policies are not about undoing the big causes of enduring inequality, and do not ameliorate harms terribly well either—without yielding all hope. Drawing on efforts across housing and infrastructure, resistant media-making, health, governance and land tenure battles in regional and remote Australia, Wild Policy looks at how the logics of intervention are formulated and what this reveals in answer to the question: why is it all so hard? Lea offers readers a layered, multi-relational approach called policy ecology to probe the related question, 'what is to be done?' Lea's case material will resonate with analysts across the world who deal with infrastructures, policy, technologies, mining, militarization, enduring colonial legacies, and the Anthropocene.