No. 101-1, March 2023
Index
- A replication of “the effects of making public service employees aware of their prosocial and societal impact”
- Administrative intensity and local resident satisfaction in Victorian local government
- Designing for adaptation: Static and dynamic robustness in policy‐making
- Effects of representative bureaucracy on perceived performance and fairness: Experimental evidence from South Asia
- Human resources information systems: a guide for public administrators. Valcik, N. A., Sabharwal, M., Benavides, T. J. (2021). Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature Switzerland
- Integrating citizen deliberation into climate governance: Lessons on robust design from six climate assemblies
- Issue Information
- Predicting executive vacancies: An organizational approach
- Professional development leadership in turbulent times: Public administration symposium: Robust politics and governance in turbulent times
- Public administration and politics meet turbulence: The search for robust governance responses
- Regional Public Sector Organizations: A broader taxonomic classification to cross‐pollinate empirical research
- Robust crisis communication in turbulent times: Conceptualization and empirical evidence from the United States
- Robust emergency management: The role of institutional trust in organized volunteers
- Robust governance for the long term and the heat of the moment: Temporal strategies for coping with dual crises
- The public sector and co‐creation in turbulent times: A systematic literature review on robust governance in the COVID‐19 emergency
- Thinking outside the box, improvisation, and fast learning: Designing policy robustness to deal with what cannot be foreseen
- What matters the most in curbing early COVID‐19 mortality? A cross‐country necessary condition analysis
- Who loves input controls? What happened to “outputs not inputs” in UK Public Financial Management, and why?
- Why we need bricoleurs to foster robust governance solutions in turbulent times
- Work safety regulation in China: the CCP's fatality quota system. Gao Jie, Routledge: Routledge Contemporary China Series, (2022). 247 pp., $US160 (hard cover), ISBN: 978‐1‐138‐18244
- “I have learned my lesson”: How clients' trust betrayals shape the future ways in which street‐level bureaucrats cope with their clients
- “Let's organize”: The organizational basis for stable public governance
- “One, none, and a hundred thousand” recipes for a robust response to turbulence