Description
Book SynopsisAn anthropological account of how rankings, statistics and numbers are reshaping the world we live in
Trade Review'A new and compelling argument for why so many institutions continue to be spellbound by rankings and metrics - despite the cultural carnage they cause in schools, hospitals, universities, corporations and governmental agencies. How can we halt this 'death by audit' craze that has swept through modern society like a deadly virus? In this thought provoking book, the authors develop a radical agenda that will strike fear into number-loving technocrats around the world.'
-- Peter Fleming, author of 'Dark Academia: How Universities Die'
'If you want to go and see a film, choose a university or find the best restaurant, you are likely to consult some sort of ranking ... In this timely work, Shore and Wright ask us to question this contemporary common sense and the market managerialism that lies behind it. Can we imagine a world without audit, one in which our choices are not counted, and trust does not rely on numbers?'
-- Professor Martin Parker, University of Bristol Business School
'The expansion of audits, indicators and rankings has become a pressing issue for governance and democracy. Cris Shore and Susan Wright build on decades of work to provide a powerful and definitive critical diagnosis of the effects of this audit culture on individuals, public organisations and society. Their book should be essential reading for scholars and policy makers.'
-- Michael Power, Professor of Accounting, London School of Economics and Political Science
'A visionary book. Two anthropologists piece together a global jigsaw: how for 25 years practices of accountability have been transforming almost every aspect of organisational and personal life. A brilliantly lucid, vigorously argued critique, clear-eyed about the structures that undermine us.'
-- Marilyn Strathern, Emeritus Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge
Table of ContentsList of Figures
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Series Preface
Preface
1. Introduction: Audit Culture and the New World (Dis)Order
2. Rankings as Populist Project: Governing by Numbers and Hollowing out Democracy
3. The Big Four Accountancy Firms and the Evolution of Contemporary Capitalism
4. Global Governance through Standards, Seduction and Soft Power
5. Metrics, Managerialism and Market Making: Unlocking Value in Healthcare
6. Reforming Higher Education: The Kafkaesque Pursuit of ‘World Class’ Status
7. The New Subjects of Audit: Performance Management and Quantified Selves
8. Conclusion: Repurposing Audit – Restoring Trust, Accountability and Democracy
Bibliography
Index