new governance
Learn about this topic in these articles:
major reference
- In governance: The new governance
The interest in governance derives in large part from reforms of the public sector that began in the 1980s, and new governance refers to the apparent spread of markets and networks following upon these reforms. It points to the varied ways in which…
Read More
governance theories and practice
- In governance
…more specific term, such as new governance, to refer to the changes in the state since the 1980s.
Read More - In governance: Social science
In their view, the new governance is characterized by networks in which the state and other organizations depend on each other. Even when the state remains the dominant organization, it and the other members of the network are interdependent in that they have to exchange resources if they are…
Read More - In governance: Governance beyond the state
The literature on the new governance highlights the role of markets, networks, and non-state actors. It thereby weakens the distinction between states and other domains of social order. All social and political regimes appear to depend on a pattern of rule, or form of governance, no matter how informal…
Read More - In governance: Systems theory
Again, the new governance arose out of the belief that society has become centreless, or at least endowed with multiple centres. From this perspective, order arises from the interactions of multiple centres or organizations. The role of the state is not to create order but to facilitate…
Read More - In governance: Public policy
The rise of the new governance raises a question: How should the state try to implement its policies, given the proliferation of markets and networks within the public sector? Answers to this question typically seek to balance concerns over efficiency with ones over ethics. To some extent, the leading…
Read More - In governance: Democratic governance
However, the new governance raises specific problems for our democratic practices. Democracy is usually associated with elected officials making policies, which public servants then implement. The public servants are answerable to the elected politicians who, in turn, are accountable to the voting public. However, the rise of…
Read More - In governance: Non-majoritarian institutions
The new governance sits oddly beside the ideal of representative and responsible government in accord with the will of the majority. It involves private- and voluntary-sector actors in policy processes even though these actors are rarely democratically accountable in as straightforward a way as are public-sector…
Read More - In governance: Democratic visions
…transformations brought about by the new governance have led some to advocate expanding the concept of democratic legitimacy to encompass efficacy, legal accountability, or social inclusion.
Read More - In governance: Conclusion
The concept of the new governance refers, most prominently, to an institutional shift—at all levels of government, from the local to the international—from bureaucracy to markets and networks. Of course, it is important to remember that this shift is neither universal nor uniform and that bureaucracy probably remains the…
Read More