For many years, concern has been raised about the demise of the teaching of public administration. No longer is the subject taught in its own right as an undergraduate subject in the UK. The emphasis has moved from administration to management. The malaise in the teaching of public administration is such that the subject has almost disappeared. It is time to re-visit the importance of public administration as a taught academic subject, and its importance in many other academic disciplines.
BovairdTLöfflerE (eds) (2009) Public Management and Governance (2nd ed.). London: Routledge.
2.
ChandlerJ (1991) Public Administration and Private Management: Is There A Difference?Public Administration69(3): 385–92.
3.
DunleavyP (1982) Is There a Radical Approach to Public Administration?Public Administration60(2): 215–33.
4.
DunleavyPHoodC (1994) From Old Public Administration to New Public Management. Public Money & Management14(3): 9–16.
5.
DunsireA (1973) Administration: The Word and the Science. Oxford: Robertson.
6.
FlynnN (2007) Public Sector Management (5th ed.). London: Sage.
7.
GrayAJenkinsB (1995) From Public Administration to Public Management: Reassessing a Revolution. Public Administration73(1): 75–99.
8.
GreenwoodJ (1999) The Demise of Traditional Teaching: Public Administration in Britain. Teaching Public Administration19(1): 53–61.
9.
GreenwoodJEgginsH (1995) Shifting Sands: Teaching Public Administration in a Climate of Change. Public Administration73(1): 143–63.
10.
GreenwoodJWilsonD (1984) Public Administration in Britain. London: Unwin Hyman.
11.
GreenwoodJWilsonD (1988) Public Administration in BritainToday (2nd ed.). London: Unwin Hyman.
12.
GreenwoodJPyperRWilsonD (2002) New Public Administration in Britain (3rd ed.). London: Routledge.
13.
HogwoodB (1995) Public Policy. Public Administration73(1): 59–73.
14.
HoodC (1991) A Public Management for all Seasons?Public Administration69(1): 3–19.
15.
HoodC (1995) Emerging Issues in Public Administration. Public Administration73(1): 165–83.
16.
MasseyAPyperR (2005) Public Management and Modernisation in Britain. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
17.
O’LearyB (1985) Is There a Radical Public Administration?Public Administration63(3): 345–52.
18.
PageE (1995) Comparative Public Administration. Public Administration73(1): 123–41.
19.
RhodesR (1996) From Institutions to Dogma: Tradition, Eclecticism, and Ideology in the Study of British Public Administration. Public Administration Review56(6): 507–16.
20.
RhodesRDargieCMelvilleATuttB (1995) The State of Public Administration: A Professional History, 1970–1995. Public Administration73(1): 1–15.
21.
RidleyF (1972) Public Administration: Cause for Discontent. Public Administration50(1): 65–77.