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Joint Approaches to Social Policy
Rationality and Practice

This book isconcerned with the quest for rationality in decision-making, and the premise that improvements in the machinery of decision-making lead to better decisions.

Linda Challis (Author), Susan Fuller (Author), Melanie Henwood (Author), Rudolf Klein (Author), William Plowden (Author), Adrian Webb (Author), Peter Whittingham (Author), Gerald Wistow (Author)

9780521309004, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 11 February 1988

302 pages, 19 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm, 0.61 kg

This book is in essence concerned with the quest for rationality in decision-making, and is founded on the premise that improvements in the machinery of decision-making can actually lead to better decisions. The numerous initiatives of the 1960s and 1970s established specifically to foster greater policy coordination (notably the Central Policy Review Staff or 'Think Tank') had, by the beginning of the 1980s, fallen foul of an altogether changed political climate, in which policy formation was increasingly determined by the pressures of the marketplace, rather than by the pursuit of rationally-determined consensual goals. Paradoxically, however, this process has led, in turn, to renewed interest in the possibilities of interdepartmental policy coordination, at both centre and periphery, and in Joint Approaches to Social Policy the authors seek to provide a clear understanding of what the reality, rather than the rhetoric, of policy coordination actually entails. They endeavour to familiarise policy-makers at all levels with the basic conceptual tools necessary for successful policy coordination.

Biographical notes
Preface
Acknowledgements
1. Rationality - the history of an idea
2. Investigating policy coordination: issues and hypotheses
3. Policy coordination for children under five and for elderly people
4. Whatever happened to JASP?
5. Policy coordination: a view of Whitehall
6. Coordination at local level: introducing methods and localities
7. Coordination at local level: state of play
8. Barriers and opportunities
9. Costs, benefits and incentives
10. Understanding coordination
11. Towards a new model of social planning
Index.

Subject Areas: Social welfare & social services [JKS]

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