The constitutional position of the British Civil Service : an assessment of the impact of managerialism on the notion of 'the servant of the Crown' via a case study of HM Prison Service
The institution of the civil service is of much contemporary interest here in Britain and elsewhere. The phenomenon of civil service reform forms a significant part of the wider movement to remould public services or in the now legendary phrase, to ‘reinvent government’ on what could be perceived as...
Main Author: | Loh, Irene Joo Phaik |
---|---|
Published: |
University of Hull
2000
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.342955 |
Similar Items
-
Techniques of information and persuasion employed by H.M. Government, 1945-51
by: Crofts, S. W.
Published: (1983) -
Conflicting notions of national and constitutional sovereignty in the discourses of political theory and international relations : a genealogical perspective
by: Shinoda, Hideaki
Published: (1998) -
Specialist advisors and the British House of Commons : the Treasury and Civil Service Committee 1979-1990
by: Laugharne, Peter James
Published: (1993) -
Legislative control of executive powers : a comparative study of the British and French-derived constitutions of Kenya and the Ivory Coast
by: Ojwang, J. B.
Published: (1981) -
The continuity of Aboriginal customs and government under British imperial constitutional law as applied in colonial Canada, 1760-1860
by: Walters, Mark D.
Published: (1995)