New article: How pandemic killed the millennial paradigm
My article “The third and fatal shock: How pandemic killed the millennial paradigm,” is now published in Public Administration Review.
Jun 14
My article “The third and fatal shock: How pandemic killed the millennial paradigm,” is now published in Public Administration Review.
My article “Should we defend the administrative state?” has just been published by Public Administration Review. A one-minute video summary of the article is available on YouTube.
My paper “Shaking Hands with Hitler: The Politics-Administration Dichotomy and Engagement with Fascism” is now published in Public Administration Review. A draft is available on SSRN. Image right: Site of the 1936 IULA conference: Kroll Opera House, Berlin.
I discussed my recent article in Perspectives on Public Management and Governance with Justin Bullock and Nathan Favreau as part of their new series of Facebook interviews. Video here. Link to the article: The Aims of Public Administration: Reviving the Classical View.
My article “The Aims of Public Administration: Reviving the Classical View” has just been published in Perspectives on Public Management and Governance. Free access here.
My paper “The aims of public administration: Reviving the classical view” has been accepted for publication in Perspectives on Public Management and Governance. The working version of the paper is available here. More about PPMG here.
My article, “No Simple Fix: Fiscal Rules and the Politics of Austerity,” has now been published by the Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies.
My article for the Wilson Quarterly, The Nation-State: Not Dead Yet, is on the Foreign Policy Association’s must-read list for August 7-14.
A translation of my article “The nation-state: Not dead yet” has just been published in Perspectives libres No. 13 (April 2015). Details here.
I’ve just posted a short paper on SSRN, “The Nation-State: Not Dead Yet.” It marks twenty years since the publication of several influential books (by Kenichi Ohmae, Jean-Marie Guéhenno, and Susan Strange) that predicted the end of the nation-state.