1st Edition

Policy-Making in Britain An Introduction

Edited By Maurice Mullard Copyright 1995
    280 Pages
    by Routledge

    280 Pages
    by Routledge

    The book provides a broad-based introduction to policy-making in Britain, exporing the legacy of the Thatcher era and charting the new context of policy-making in the 1990s.
    The authors examine the policy process within its ideological, political and economic context, discussing both the influence of Europe and the influence of local government. Having established a broad framework for analysis, the book focuses on a selection of particular policy areas; public expenditure, the NHS, Next Steps, water privatisation, pensions, education and immigration.
    The aim of the book is to give a sense of the actual dynamics of policy-making and to encourage students to think about the likely outcomes of policy-change, while making the connections between British public policy and the environment in which it is shaped.

    Section One: Introduction, Maurice Mullard 1.Political Ideas, Robert Leach 2.The Political Context, Harry Fineberg 3.The European Context, John Kingdom 4.Local Government as a Context for Policy, John Williamson 5.The Economic Context, Maurice Mullard Section Two 6.Public Expenditure Decisions for the 1990s, Maurice Mullard 7.Pensions, Politics and Prospects, Kirk Mann 8. Privatisation and Water, John Dickens 9.Health Policy, Tom Burden 10.The Agencification of the United Kingodom Civil Service, Richard Common 11.Vocational Education and Training in the 1990s, John Konrad 12.Immigration and the politics of Ethnic Diversity Conclusion, Robert Leach

    Biography

    Maurice Mullard, Hull University