Description

Book Synopsis
Local governments serve their communities in many diversified ways as they increasingly engage in multiple connections: international, regional, regional-local, with nongovernmental organizations and through external nongovernmental services county actors. The book discusses how the shift in emphasis from government to governance has raised many management challenges, along with shifting expectations and demands.

Trade Review
Robert Agranoff is the doyen of collaborative public management. Local Governments in Multilevel Governance explores the way multi-level government impacts public management. He explores how the shift from government to governance has changed the relationships between networks and bureaucracy, especially in local government. It will be a career defining book and a ‘must read’ for anyone interested in managing the complex webs of organizations that typify modern governance. -- R A W Rhodes, University of Southampton
Robert Agranoff’s broad sweep of the administrative challenges of local government in the current era of global and multi-level governance is both exhaustive and compelling. Synthesizing the rapidly growing literature on multi-level governance and drawing on his vast research experience in cross-national public management, Agranoff’s monograph provides the most comprehensive and contemporary understanding of the managerial challenges facing governments whether a federal or quasi-federal or emerging federal system. Indeed, as Agranoff claims, multi-level governance issues transcend federal systems as various networks define the complexity of MLG governance in the contemporary era. The work is grounded in extensive analyses of NGOs and governmental agencies, their interactions, and the promise for greater intergovernmental collaboration. The frame for understanding MLG complexity is from that of local governments, which given the enormous variation in structure, form and style across the local government terrain creates the dynamic texture of Agranoff’s analysis. Local Governments in Multi-Level Governance will be required reading for all scholars of government, governance, and political systems in general. -- Michael A. Pagano, The University of Illinois at Chicago
This book is a great contribution to our understanding of a crucial yet undervalued governance actor: local government. By one of the most renowned scholars in the field of intergovernmental relations and network management, the volume achieves both to conceptually analyze the complex changes transforming public administration and to pragmatically provide tools and managerial insights for practitioners. Agranoff exquisitely describes how local governments are today a) vertically linked all the way up to international institutions, b) horizontally embedded in multiple inter-local bodies, c) organizationally related to external for profit and nonprofit providers, and d) politically permeated by citizen groups and initiatives. The author also reviews in depth the managerial consequences of these phenomenal transformations. The book is a necessary counterpoint to both the simplistic legal characterization of local governments as isolated bureaucracies and to the unsophisticated rhetoric of government hollowing-out. The book’s international comparative approach makes it even more valuable to both researchers and practitioners. -- Angel Saz-Carranza, Director, ESADEgeo Center for Global Economy and Geopolitics

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Governing in Multi-Level Systems: Administrative Linkages from Local to National Chapter 2: Intergovernmental Relations Platforms: Managing in MLG Chapter 3: Bringing Local Governments into MLG Systems Chapter 4: Local System Development Chapter 5: Politics: Big “P” and Small “p” Chapter 6: The Knowledge Management Challenge in MLG Chapter 7: Networks and Networking Chapter 8: Interoperability: Sequential Inter-organizational Planning and Programming Chapter 9: The New Bureaucracy: Conductive Administrative Organizations Chapter 10: An Emerging Paradigm: Global Influences on Local Governments Chapter 11: Local Government, MLG: Its Administration in the Present and Future

Local Governments in Multilevel Governance

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A Hardback by Robert Agranoff

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    View other formats and editions of Local Governments in Multilevel Governance by Robert Agranoff

    Publisher: Lexington Books
    Publication Date: 1/30/2018 12:03:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9781498530606, 978-1498530606
    ISBN10: 1498530605

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Local governments serve their communities in many diversified ways as they increasingly engage in multiple connections: international, regional, regional-local, with nongovernmental organizations and through external nongovernmental services county actors. The book discusses how the shift in emphasis from government to governance has raised many management challenges, along with shifting expectations and demands.

    Trade Review
    Robert Agranoff is the doyen of collaborative public management. Local Governments in Multilevel Governance explores the way multi-level government impacts public management. He explores how the shift from government to governance has changed the relationships between networks and bureaucracy, especially in local government. It will be a career defining book and a ‘must read’ for anyone interested in managing the complex webs of organizations that typify modern governance. -- R A W Rhodes, University of Southampton
    Robert Agranoff’s broad sweep of the administrative challenges of local government in the current era of global and multi-level governance is both exhaustive and compelling. Synthesizing the rapidly growing literature on multi-level governance and drawing on his vast research experience in cross-national public management, Agranoff’s monograph provides the most comprehensive and contemporary understanding of the managerial challenges facing governments whether a federal or quasi-federal or emerging federal system. Indeed, as Agranoff claims, multi-level governance issues transcend federal systems as various networks define the complexity of MLG governance in the contemporary era. The work is grounded in extensive analyses of NGOs and governmental agencies, their interactions, and the promise for greater intergovernmental collaboration. The frame for understanding MLG complexity is from that of local governments, which given the enormous variation in structure, form and style across the local government terrain creates the dynamic texture of Agranoff’s analysis. Local Governments in Multi-Level Governance will be required reading for all scholars of government, governance, and political systems in general. -- Michael A. Pagano, The University of Illinois at Chicago
    This book is a great contribution to our understanding of a crucial yet undervalued governance actor: local government. By one of the most renowned scholars in the field of intergovernmental relations and network management, the volume achieves both to conceptually analyze the complex changes transforming public administration and to pragmatically provide tools and managerial insights for practitioners. Agranoff exquisitely describes how local governments are today a) vertically linked all the way up to international institutions, b) horizontally embedded in multiple inter-local bodies, c) organizationally related to external for profit and nonprofit providers, and d) politically permeated by citizen groups and initiatives. The author also reviews in depth the managerial consequences of these phenomenal transformations. The book is a necessary counterpoint to both the simplistic legal characterization of local governments as isolated bureaucracies and to the unsophisticated rhetoric of government hollowing-out. The book’s international comparative approach makes it even more valuable to both researchers and practitioners. -- Angel Saz-Carranza, Director, ESADEgeo Center for Global Economy and Geopolitics

    Table of Contents
    Chapter 1: Governing in Multi-Level Systems: Administrative Linkages from Local to National Chapter 2: Intergovernmental Relations Platforms: Managing in MLG Chapter 3: Bringing Local Governments into MLG Systems Chapter 4: Local System Development Chapter 5: Politics: Big “P” and Small “p” Chapter 6: The Knowledge Management Challenge in MLG Chapter 7: Networks and Networking Chapter 8: Interoperability: Sequential Inter-organizational Planning and Programming Chapter 9: The New Bureaucracy: Conductive Administrative Organizations Chapter 10: An Emerging Paradigm: Global Influences on Local Governments Chapter 11: Local Government, MLG: Its Administration in the Present and Future

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