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Democratic Governance: A Genealogy

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History of Economic Rationalities

Part of the book series: Ethical Economy ((SEEP,volume 54))

Abstract

This chapter provides a genealogy of governance, arguing that: governance rose and spread as a consequence of new modernist theories and the public sector reforms that were inspired by these theories. Modernist social science rejected the historicism of the nineteenth century. It relied instead on formal explanations based on economic models or sociological correlations, classifications, and ideal types. This modernism informed the main narratives of the crisis of the administrative and welfare state in the 1970s and so the main reforms introduced in response to this crisis. The first wave of reform occurred as economic modernism inspired marketization and the new public management. The second wave of reform occurred as sociological modernism inspired joined-up governance and networks. Together these reforms involved attempts to move from government to a governance based on markets and networks.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    For a survey of the varied voices see the oft maligned but still useful T. Hutchison 1953. For an example of their debating public policy see Royal Commission on the Depression of Trade and Industry, Final Report, c. 4893/1886.

  2. 2.

    The rise of pluralist views of the state was especially pronounced in the US, on which see Gunnell 2004. For the British case see Runciman 2005 and Stears 2006.

  3. 3.

    For discussions of the growing role of expertise from the nineteenth century to the early spread of social welfare see MacLeod 1988.

  4. 4.

    For discussion see Bevir 2005 and Finlayson 1999.

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Bevir, M. (2017). Democratic Governance: A Genealogy. In: Bek-Thomsen, J., Christiansen, C., Gaarsmand Jacobsen, S., Thorup, M. (eds) History of Economic Rationalities. Ethical Economy, vol 54. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-52815-1_11

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