The article analysis should include these follow elements:
- Executive summary – What are the key points of the journal:
Thesis/Purpose – What is the article trying to achieve? What is the articles main point?
Who is the Audience?Who is the article written for:
How does that influence how the article is written?Methodology:
How is the Thesis/Purpose of the article achieved?
What evidence is offered?
How was the information gathered?Survey?
Research?
Database Mining?
Real life experience?How was the information/data analyzed
Content Analysis
Statistical Analysis
Narrative - Relevance:
If you were a public administrator how would you use the information?
Would it help you identify a problem?
Would help you select a policy option?
Would it help you implement a policy option?
Would it help you evaluate a policy?
Public Value Governance: Moving beyond Traditional Public Administration and the New
Public Management
Author(s): John M. Bryson, Barbara C. Crosby and Laura Bloomberg
Source: Public Administration Review , JULY/AUGUST 2014, Vol. 74, No. 4
(JULY/AUGUST 2014), pp. 445-456
Published by: Wiley on behalf of the American Society for Public Administration
Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/24029426
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https://www.jstor.org/stable/24029426
John M. Bryson
Barbara C. Crosby
Laura Bloomberg
University of Minnesota
Public Value Governance: Moving beyond Traditional Public
Administration and the New Public Management
Anew public administration movement is
emerging to move beyond traditional public
administration and New Public Management.
The new movement is a response to the challenges of
a networked, multi-sector, no-one-wholly-in-charge
world and to the shortcomings of previous public
administration approaches. In the new approach
values beyond efficiency and effectiveness—and
especially democratic values—are prominent.
Government has a special role to play as a guarantor
of public values, but citizens as well as businesses
and nonprofit organizations also are important as
active public problem solvers. The article highlights
value-related issues in the new approach and presents
an agenda for research and action to be pursued if the
new approach is to fulfill its promise.
Creating public value is a hot topic for both public
administration practitioners and scholars (Shearer
and Williams 2011; Van der Wal, Nabatachi, and
de Graaf 2013). Why is that? What is going on? We
believe the answer lies with the continuing evolution
of public administration thinking and practice. Just
as New Public Management supplanted traditional
public administration in the 1980s and 1990s as the
dominant view, a new movement is underway that is
likely to eclipse it. The new approach does not have
a consensually agreed name, but many authors point
to the need for a new approach and to aspects of its
emergence in practice and theory (e.g., Moore, 1995,
2013, 2014a; Boyte 2005; Stoker 2006; Bozeman
2007; Kettl 2008; Alford and Hughes, 2008; Osborne
2010; Talbot 2010; Denhardt and Denhardt 2011;
Fisher 2014; Kalambokidis 2014). For example, Janet
and Robert Denhardt’s (2011) excellent and widely
cited book The New Public Service captures much of
the collaborative and democratic spirit; content; and
governance focus of the movement.
While efficiency was the main concern of traditional
public administration, and efficiency and effectiveness
are the main concerns of New Public Management,
values beyond efficiency and effectiveness are pursued,
debated, challenged, and evaluated in the emerg
ing approach. In this regard, the emerging approach
reemphasizes and brings to the fore value-related
concerns of previous eras that were always present,
but not dominant (Denhardt and Denhardt 2011;
Rosenbloom and McCurdy 2006). This renewed
attention to a broader array of values, especially to
values associated with democracy, makes it obvious
why questions related to the creation of public value,
public values more generally, and the public sphere
have risen to prominence. This essay highlights some
of the key value-related issues in the new approach
and proposes an agenda for the future. First, we
outline what we believe are the main contours of the
emerging approach. Next, we clarify the meaning
of value, public value, public values, and the public
sphere; discuss how they are operationalized; and
summarize important challenges to the concepts. We
then discuss how public value and public values are
used in practice. Finally, we present an agenda for
research and action to be pursued if the new approach
is to fulfill its promise.1
An Emerging View of Public Administration
Public administration thinking and practice have
always responded to new challenges and the short
comings of what has come before (Kaufman 1969;
Peters and Pierre 1998). Table 1, which builds on
a similar table in Denhardt and Denhardt (2011,
28 — 29), presents a summary of traditional public
administration, the New Public Management, and the
emerging approach. The new approach highlights four
important stances that together represent a response
to current challenges and old shortcomings. These
include: an emphasis on public value and public
values; recognition that government has a special role
as a guarantor of public values; a belief in the impor
tance of public management broadly conceived, and
of service to and for the public; and a heightened
emphasis on citizenship and democratic and col
laborative governance. These concerns, of course, are
not new to public administration, but their emerging
combination is the latest response to what Dwight
Symposium
Introduction
John M. Bryson is McKnight
Presidential Professor of Planning and
Public Affairs at the Humphrey School of
Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota.
He wrote Strategic Planning for Public
and Nonprofit Organizations, and co
wrote with Barbara C. Crosby Leadership
for the Common Good. He received
the 2011 Dwight Waldo Award from the
American Society for Public Administration
for “outstanding contributions to the pro
fessional literature of public administration
over an extended scholarly career.”
E-mail: bryson001@umn.edu
Barbara C. Crosby, associate professor
at the Humphrey School of Public Affairs,
University of Minnesota, has taught and
written extensively about leadership and
public policy. She is author of Leadership
for Global Citizenship and co-author
with John M. Bryson of Leadership for
the Common Good. Former academic
co-director of the University’s Center for
Integrative Leadership, she has conducted
training for senior managers of nonprofit,
business and government organizations in
the U.S. and abroad.
E-mail: crosb002@umn.edu
Laura Bloomberg is associate dean at
the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at
the University of Minnesota. Her teaching,
research and publications focus on U.S.
education policy and administration,
cross sector leadership, and program
evaluation. Previously she was an urban
high school principal and executive director
of the University’s Center for Integrative
Leadership. She worked with former U.S.
Secretary of State Hilary Clinton to launch
the global Women in Public Service Project.
E-mail: bloom004@umn.edu
Public Administration Review,
Vol. 74, Iss. 4, pp. 445-456. © 2014 by
The American Society for Public Administration.
D01:10.1111/puar.12238.
Public Value Governance: Moving beyond Traditional Public Administration and the New Public Management 445
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Waldo (1948/2007) called the periodically changing “material and
ideological background.” Whether the new approach can live up to
its promise—and particularly its democratic promise—is an open
question we explore later.
Traditional Public Administration
Traditional public administration (Waldo 1948/2007; Stoker 2006)
arose in the United States arose in the late 1900s and matured
by the mid-twentieth century as a response to a particular set of
conditions. These included the challenges of industrialization,
urbanization, the rise of the modern corporation, faith in science,
belief in progress, and concern over major market failures. Mostly
successful experience with government responses to World War I,
the Great Depression, and World War II helped solidify support for
traditional public administration and built strong trust in govern
ment as an agent for the good of all. In its idealized form, politics
and administration were quite separate (Wilson 1887). Goals were
determined in the first instance by elected officials and only second
arily refined by technical experts in response to political direction.
Government agencies were the primary deliverers of public value
through the way they designed and implemented politically defined
objectives (Salamon 2002). Efficiency in government operations
was the preeminent value. Citizens were viewed primarily as voters,
clients, or constituents. Of course, traditional public administra
tion in practice was always more deeply enmeshed in politics than
its idealized form would suggest (Waldo 1948/2007; Denhardt and
Denhardt 2011, 6-7), and government agencies were themselves
prone to failure (Wolf 1979).
New Public Management
After a long gestation period, the New Public Management (Hood
1991) became the dominant approach to public administra
tion in the 1980s and 1990s. In the U.S. the change was marked
by Osborne and Gaebler’s (1992) best-selling book Reinventing
Government and the Clinton Administration’s National Performance
Review (Gore 1993). New Public Management arose out of a con
cern with government failures, a belief in the efficacy and efficiency
of markets, a belief in economic rationality, and a push away from
large, centralized government agencies toward devolution and
privatization.
In New Public Management, public managers are urged to “steer,
not row.” They steer by determining objectives, or what should be
done, and by catalyzing service delivery, or how it should be done
(rowing), via their choice of a particular “tool” or combination of
tools (e.g., markets, regulation, taxes, subsidies, insurance, etc.) for
achieving the objectives (Salamon 2002). Markets and competi
tion—often among actors from different sectors—are the preferred
way of delivering government services in the most efficient and
effective way to recipients seen as “customers,” not citizens. Public
managers should be empowered and freed from constrictions so that
they can be “entrepreneurial” and “manage for results.” In practice,
of course, managers often face the worst of circumstances in which
they are accountable for results, but not allowed to manage for
results (Moynihan 2006).
While the challenges that prompted traditional public adminis
tration and New Public Management have not disappeared, new
material conditions and challenges have emerged. They center on
how to govern, not just manage, in increasingly diverse and complex
societies facing increasingly complex problems (Kettl 2002; Osborne
2010; Pollitt and Bouckaert 2011). Natural disasters, failures of
large parts of the economy, unevenly effective health care and edu
cational systems, a stagnant middle class, deepening inequality, and
bankrupt communities offer recent examples that have challenged
not just governments, but businesses, nonprofits, and civil society
generally. In the U.S., these challenges are occurring at a time of
historic distrust of a broad range of institutions (Gallup 2014).
The Emerging Approach
The responses to these new challenges do not yet constitute a
coherent whole, but the outlines of a new approach are becom
ing clear in, for example, Janet and Robert Denhardt’s (2002;
2011) widely cited framework called the New Public Service, but
also in Gerry Stoker’s (2006) public value management, Barry
Bozeman’s (2007) managing publicness, Stephen Osborne’s new
public governance (2010), and political theorist Harry Boyte’s and
colleagues’ (Boyte 2011) new civic politics.. These scholars draw on
different theoretical and epistemological foundations than tradi
tional public administration or New Public Management. Citizens,
citizenship, and democracy are central to the new approach, which
harkens back to Dwight Waldo’s (1948/2007) abiding interest in a
democratic theory of administration. The approach advocates more
contingent, pragmatic kinds of rationality, going beyond the formal
rationalities of Herbert Simon’s (1997) “administrative man” and
microeconomics’ “economic man.” Citizens are seen as quite capa
ble of engaging in deliberative problem solving that allows them
to develop a public spiritedness of the type de Tocqueville saw in
the 1830s American republic when he talked about the prevalence
of “self-interest rightly understood” (de Tocqueville 1840/2002;
Mansbridge 1990).
Scholars arguing for the new approach see public value emerging
from broadly inclusive dialogue and deliberation. The conversation
includes community members from multiple sectors because, as
Beck Jorgensen and Bozeman (2007, 373-374) note, “public values
and public value are not the exclusive province of government, nor
is government the only set of institutions having public value obli
gations, [though clearly] government has a special role as guarantor
of public values.” This aspect of the approach has many precursors,
including for example, the work of Vincent and Elinor Ostrom
(Ostrom 1973; Ostrom and Ostrom 1971), which also provides
important underpinnings for understanding networked and col
laborative governance (McGinnis and Ostrom 2012; Thomson
and Perry 2006). The approach encompasses what Boyte (2011,
632-633) terms “public work,” meaning “self-organized, sustained
efforts by a mix of people who solve common problems and create
things, material or symbolic, of lasting civic value,” while develop
ing civic learning and capacity as part of the process. This work can
engage many different kinds of people, including public-spirited
managers from across sectors and citizens. Citizens thus move
beyond their roles as voters, clients, constituents, customers, or poll
responders to becoming problem-solvers, co-creators, and gover
nors actively engaged in producing what is valued by the public
and good for the public (De Souza Briggs 2008). Budd (2014) cap
tures the importance of work in general for the creation of public
value, and the special role that labor unions have often played in its
creation.
446 Public Administration Review • July | August 2014
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Table 1 Comparing Perspectives: Traditional Public Administration, New Public Management, and the Emerging Approach to Public Administration
Dimension Traditional Public Administration New Public Management
The Emerging Approach to Public Administration (e.g.,
Denhardt and Denhardt’s [2011] New Public Service)
Broad Environmental and Intellectual Context
Material and ideo- Industrialization, urbanization, rise of Concern with government failures, Concern with market, government, nonprofit and civic
logical conditions modern corporation, specialization, distrust of big government, be- failures; concern with so-called wicked problems;
faith in science, belief in progress, lief in the efficacy and efficiency deepening inequality; hollowed or thinned state;
concern over major market failures, of markets and rationality, “downsized” citizenship; networked and collaborative
experience with the Great Depression devolution and devolution governance; advanced information and communication
and WWII, high trust in government technologies
Primary theoretical Political theory, scientific management, Economic theory, sophisticated Democratic theory, public and nonprofit management
and epistemologi- naive social science, pragmatism positivist social science theory, plus diverse approaches to knowing
cal foundations
Prevailing view of Synoptic rationality, “administrative Technical and economic rationality, Formal rationality, multiple tests of rationality (political,
rationality and man” “economic man,” self-interested administrative, economic, legal, ethical), belief in public
model of human decisionmakers spiritedness beyond narrow self-interest, “reasonable
behavior person” open to influence via dialogue and deliberation
The Public Sphere or Realm
Definition of the Determined by elected officials or techni- Determined by elected officials or What is public is seen as going far beyond government,
common good, cal experts by aggregating individual prefer- though government has a special role as a guarantor of
public value, ences supported by evidence of public values. Common good determined by broadly in
public interest consumer choice elusive dialogue and deliberation informed by evidence
and democratic and constitutional values
Role of politics Elect governors, who determine policy Elect governors, who determine “Public work,” including determining policy objectives via
objectives policy objectives; empowered dialogue and deliberation; democracy as “a way of life”
managers; administrative politics
around the use of specific tools
Role of citizenship Voter, client, constituent Customer Citizens seen as problem-solvers and co-creators actively
engaged in creating what is valued by the public and is
good for the public
Government and Public Administration
Role of government Rowing, seen as designing and imple- Steering, seen as determining Government acts as convener, catalyst, collaborator;
agencies menting policies and programs in re- objectives and catalyzing service sometimes steering, sometimes, rowing, sometimes
sponse to politically defined objectives delivery via tool choice and partnering, sometimes staying out of the way
reliance if possible on markets,
businesses and nonprofit organi
zations
Key objectives Politically provided goals; implementation Politically provided goals; Create public value in such a way that what the public
managed by public servants; monitor- managers manage inputs and most cares about is addressed effectively and what is
ing done via bureaucratic and elected outputs in a way that ensures good for the public is put in place
officials’ oversight economy and responsiveness to
consumers
Key values Efficiency Efficiency and Effectiveness Efficiency, effectiveness, and the full range of democratic
and constitutional values
Mechanisms for Administer programs through central- Create mechanisms and incentive Selection from a menu of alternative delivery mechanisms
achieving policy ized, hierarchically organized public structures to achieve policy based on pragmatic criteria; this often means helping
objectives agencies or self-regulating professions objectives especially through use build cross-sector collaborations and engaging citizens
of markets to achieve agreed objectives
Role of public man- Ensures that rules and appropriate Helps define and meet agreed Plays an active role in helping create and guide networks
ager procedures are followed.. Responsive upon performance objectives; of deliberation and delivery and help maintain and
to elected officials, constituents, and responsive to elected officials enhance the overall effectiveness, accountability, and
clients. Limited discretion allowed to and customers; wide discretion capacity of the system. Responsive to elected officials,
administrative officials allowed citizens, and an array of other stakeholders. Discretion
is needed, but is constrained by law, democratic and
constitutional values, and a broad approach to account
ability
Approach to Hierarchical, in which administrators are Market-driven, in which aggre- Multi-faceted, since public servants must attend to law,
accountability accountable to democratically elected gated self-interests result in out- community values, political norms, professional stand
officials comes desired by broad groups ards, and citizen interests
of citizens seen as customers
Contribution to the Delivers politically determined objec- Delivers politically determined Delivers dialogue and catalyzes and responds to active citi
democratic process tives and accountability; competition objectives; managers determine zenship in pursuit of what the public values and what is
between elected leaders provides over- the means. Skepticism regard- good for the public. No one sector has a monopoly on
arching accountability. Public sector ing public service ethos; favors public service ethos; maintaining relationships based on
has a monopoly on public service ethos customer service shared public values is essential
Sources: Adapted principally from Denhardt and Denhardt (2011, 28-29); with further adaptations from Stoker (2006, 44; Kelly, Mulgan, and Muers 2002), and Boyte
(2011).
Public Value Governance: Moving beyond Traditional Public Administration and the New Public Management 447
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In the new approach, government agencies can be a convener,
catalyst, and collaborator—sometimes steering, sometimes row
ing, sometimes partnering, and sometimes staying out of the way.
In addition, the way government’s key objectives are set changes.
In traditional public administration, elected officials set goals and
implementation is up to public servants, overseen by elected offi
cials’ and senior administrators. In New Public Management elected
officials still set goals. Managers then manage inputs and outputs
in a way that ensures economy and responsiveness to customers.
In contrast, in the new approach both elected officials and public
managers are charged with creating public value so that what the
public most cares about is addressed effectively and what is good
for the public is pursued. This change for public managers raises
obvious questions of democratic accountability, an issue to which
we turn later. On the other hand, the change is essentially simply a
recognition that managers have always played an important role in
goal setting because of the advice they give to elected officials and
the need to act in the face of often ambiguous policy direction.
As noted, in the emerging approach the full range of democratic and
constitutional values is relevant. Policy makers and public managers
are also encouraged to consider the full array of alternative delivery
mechanisms and choose among them based on pragmatic criteria.
This often means helping build cross-sector collaborations and
engaging citizens to achieve mutually agreed objectives (McGuire
2006; Agranoff 2006; Fung 2006). Public managers’ role thus goes
well beyond that in traditional public administration or New Public
Management; they are presumed able to help create and guide net
works of deliberation and delivery and help maintain and enhance
the overall effectiveness, capacity, and accountability of the system.
The nature of discretion also changes. In traditional public admin
istration, public managers have limited discretion; New Public
Management encourages wide discretion in meeting entrepreneurial
and performance targets. In the emerging approach, discretion is
needed, but is constrained by law, democratic and constitutional
values, and a broad approach to accountability. Accountability
becomes multi-faceted, and not just hierarchical (as in traditional
public administration) or more market-driven (as in New Public
Management), since public servants must attend to law, community
values, political norms, professional standards, and citizen interests
(Mulgan 2000; Dubnick and Frederickson 2010; Romzek, LeRoux
and Blackmar 2012). In the emerging multi-sector collaborative
environment, no one sector has a monopoly on public service ethos,
although government plays a special role; in addition, there is less
skepticism about government and a less strong preference for mar
kets and customer service.
Finally, in this emerging approach public administration’s contribu
tion to the democratic process is also different. In both traditional
public administration and New Public Management managers are
not very directly involved in the democratic process, viewed mainly
as elections and legislative deliberation. In contrast, in the emerging
approach government delivers dialogue and catalyzes and responds
to active citizenship in pursuit of what the public values and what is
good for the public. The extent to which it is possible for dialogue
and deliberation to do so in practice remains unclear, however, in
systems that favor elites and are stacked against ordinary citizens
(Dahl and Soss 2014).
The emerging approach is partly descriptive of current and emerging
practices, partly normative in its prescriptions regarding the role of
government and public managers, and partly hopeful as a response
to the challenges posed by a “changing material and ideologi
cal background.” In contrast to traditional public administration
and New Public Management, however, the emerging approach
often looks ambiguous, unevenly grounded theoretically, relatively
untested, and lacking in clear guidance for practice. Yet, what else
can one expect in a shared-power, multi-sector, no-one-wholly
in-charge world (Cleveland 2002; Crosby and Bryson 2005)? Old
approaches have their own problems and the new approach is still
emerging. One thing is clear, however, and that is the fundamental
importance in the emerging approach of understanding what is
meant by public value, public values, and the public sphere. Progress
must be made on clarifying, measuring, and assessing these concepts
if the new approach is gain added traction.
Value, Public Value, Public Values and the Public Sphere
The dictionary definition of value as “relative worth, utility, or
importance” of something (Merriam-Webster 2014; accessed online
April 1, 2014) leaves open a number of questions that have troubled
philosophers for centuries, and reappear in the current debate over
public values, public value, and the public sphere. These questions
concern at least the following: (1) whether the objects of value are
subjective psychological states, or objective states of the world;
(2) whether value is intrinsic, extrinsic, or relational; (3) whether
something is valuable for its own sake or as a means to something
else; (4) whether there are hierarchies of values; (5) who does the
valuing; (6) how the valuing is done; and (7) against what criteria
the object of value is measured. We return to these questions as we
discuss four major contributions to the public value literature and in
our conclusions.
The public value literature distinguishes among: (1) public values,
which are many (e.g., Van Wart 1998; Bozeman 2002, 2007; Beck
Jorgenson and Bozeman 2007; Meynhardt 2009; Andersen et al.
2012); (2) creating public value defined as producing what is either
valued by the public, is good for the public, including adding to
the public sphere, or both, as assessed against various public value
criteria (Benington and Moore 2011; Stoker 2006; Alford 2008;
Alford and O’Flynn 2009); and (3) the public sphere or public realm
within which public values and value are developed and played out
(Benington 2011).
Barry Bozeman on Public Values
Bozeman (2007, 17), a leading voice in the public value literature,
focuses on the policy or societal level. He writes, “A society’s public
values are those providing normative consensus about: (1) the rights,
benefits, and prerogatives to which citizens should (and should not)
be entitled; (2) the obligations of citizens to society, the state, and
one another; and (3) the principles on which governments and poli
cies should be based.” Although public values in a democracy are
typically contested, a relative consensus is discernible from consti
tutions, legislative mandates, policies, literature reviews, opinion
polls, and other formal and informal sources (Beck Jorgensen and
Bozeman 2007).
What Bozeman terms public values failure occurs when neither the
market nor the public sector provides goods and services required
448 Public Administration Review • July | August 2014
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to achieve public values, which are operationalized in terms of a set
of eight criteria, e.g., political processes and social cohesion should
be sufficient to ensure effective communication and processing of
public values; and sufficient transparency exists to permit citizens
to make informed judgments (Bozeman 2002, 2007; see also
Kalambokidis 2014). Public value creation is the extent to which
public values criteria are met, where these are some combination
of input, process, output, and outcome measures. Public values
for Bozeman thus are measureable, although clearly there can be
disagreements about how the values are to be conceptualized and
measured. One implication is that analysts, citizens, and policy
makers should focus on what public values are, and on ways in
which institutions and processes are necessary to forge agreement
on and achieve public values in practice (Davis and West 2009;
Moulton 2009; Jacobs 2014; Kalambokidis 2014).
Note that Bozeman’s approach is both positive, when he asks what
the normative consensus on values is, and normative, when he
argues that public values failures should be corrected. Note, too,
that Bozeman (2007) is silent on the role of the nonprofit sector
and, to a lesser extent, on the public sphere more generally; on the
rights, responsibilities, or weights to be given to non-citizens; and
on the role and importance of power in contests over public values.
Regarding the effects of political power, Jacobs (2014) believes that
in the U.S. context Bozeman severely underestimates the extent of
dissensus, the disproportionate influence of affluent citizens and
organized interests, and the extent to which governing structures
favor inaction and drift.
Mark Moore on Creating Public Value
Whereas Bozeman focuses on the policy or societal level, Mark
Moore (1995, 52-55), another important voice in the literature,
focuses on public managers. He, too, is concerned about devaluing
of government and public managers in an era of economic individu
alism and market ascendency, and he initially conceived of public
value as the public management equivalent of shareholder value.
He seeks both a persuasive rhetoric and an approach to discern
ing, championing, and achieving public value—or what he calls
creating public value. Public value primarily results from government
performance, so his view of public value creation in this early book
is narrower than in much of the later literature.
Moore believes that citizens want from their governments some
combination of the following that together encompass public
value: (1) high-performing service-oriented public bureaucracies,
(2) public organizations that are efficient and effective in achieving
desired social outcomes, and (3) public organizations that operate
justly and fairly, and lead to just and fair conditions in the society
at large. While Moore’s definition of public value is vaguer than
Bozeman’s, it highlights reasonably specific public values: efficiency,
effectiveness, socially and politically sanctioned desired outcomes,
procedural justice, and substantive justice. Like Bozeman, Moore’s
definition of public value can encompass input, process, output, and
outcome measures.
Moore (2014a) develops the philosophical foundations of his
approach to public value as a prelude to establishing what he calls
“public value accounting.” He makes three assertions: First, a public
collectively defined through democratic processes is the appropriate
arbiter of public value when collectively owned assets of government
are being deployed. Second, collectively owned assets include not
only government money, but also state authority. Third, assessing
the value of government production relies on an aggregation of
costs and benefits broadly conceived; but also on collective deter
minations concerning the welfare of others, duties to others, and
conceptions of a good and just society. Moore (2013, 2014b) uses
these philosophical premises to develop a public value account. On
the benefit side is the achievement of collectively valued outcomes,
while on the cost side are the costs of using public authority and
collectively owned assets.
Moore argues that public managers should use the strategic triangle
(1995, 22-23). Strategy must be (1) aimed at achieving something
that is substantively valuable (i.e., must constitute public value);
(2) legitimate and politically sustainable; and (3) operationally and
administratively feasible (see also Alford and O’Flynn 2009). Moore
“equates managerial success in the public sector with initiating and
reshaping public sector enterprises in ways that increase their value
to the public in both the short and the long run” (1995, 10), which
requires a “restless, value-seeking imagination” (Benington and
Moore 2011, 3).
Moore is speaking primarily to current and prospective public
managers in a democratic society and secondarily to their elected
leaders. Like Bozeman, an implication of Moore’s work is the need
for a healthy democracy with supporting institutions and the proc
esses necessary to forge agreement on and achieve public values in
practice.
For Moore, like Bozeman, public value generally refers to objective
states of the world that can be measured. Also like Bozeman, Moore
sees public value as extrinsic and also intrinsic to the functioning
of an effective democratic polity. Again, like Bozeman, something
being evaluated may be deemed to hold inherent value or may
be seen as a means to something else. Unlike Bozeman, Moore
does assume a hierarchy of values in which public organizational
effectiveness, efficiency, accountability, justness, and fairness in the
context of democratic governance are prime values. For Moore, ulti
mately elected officials and the citizenry do the valuing, but public
managers also play an important role. The valuing can be shown via
the public value account.
Rhodes and Wanna (2007) in particular have criticized Moore and
his supporters. Not clear, they say, is whether their approach is “a
paradigm, a concept, a model, a heuristic device, or even a story…
[As a result,] it is all things to all people” (408). They believe Moore
downplays the importance of politics and elected officials, overly
emphasizes the role of public managers, and trusts too much in
public organizations, private sector experience, and the virtues of
public servants (409-412).
Alford (2008; see also Alford and O’Flynn 2009) mounts a spir
ited defense of Moore and offers refutations of each of Rhodes and
Wannas points, ffe emphasizes Moore’s strategic triangle that sees
the authorizing environment as placing “a legitimate limit on the
public managers autonomy to shape what is meant by public value”
(177). Alford also believes Rhodes and Wanna operate out of an
“old” public administration paradigm that draws a sharp distinction
Public Value Governance: Moving beyond Traditional Public Administration and the New Public Management 449
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between politics and administration and thus ignore the fact that
political appointees and civil servants often have considerable leeway
to influence policy and decisions.
Dahl and Soss (2014) also level sharp criticism at Moore’s concep
tion of creating public value. In their view, by posing public value
as an analog to shareholder value, seeing democratic engagement in
primarily instrumental terms, and viewing public value as some
thing that is produced, Moore and his followers actually mimic
the very neoliberal rationality they seek to resist and run the risk of
furthering neoliberalism’s de-democratizing and market-enhancing
consequences. Public managers might unwittingly be agents of
“downsizing democracy” (Crenson and Ginsberg 2002). The cau
tions Dahl and Soss raise are serious and should be addressed by
those seeking to advance the public value literature.
In addition, Jacobs (2014) believes Moore’s hopeful view of public
management can be Pollyannaish, at least in the U.S., given sharply
divided public opinion on many issues, intensely partisan poli
tics, the power of organized interests, and the many veto points
built into governance arrangements. Clearly, public managers are
constrained in a democratic society—and rightly so—but there are
also many examples of enterprising, public value-producing activi
ties that demonstrate public managers can in fact be active agents
in creating public value. The public value literature thus will need
to explore much further the conceptual, political, organizational,
managerial, and other limits on public managers seeking to create
public value in particular circumstances.
Timo Meynhardt on Public Value
Timo Meynhardt (2009, 206), in an important but far less well
known approach, believes that public value is constructed out of
“values characterizing the relationship between an individual and
‘society,’ defining the quality of the relationship.” The relationship’s
quality is assessed subjectively by individuals, but when there is
inter-subjective weight attached to these assessments, they become
objective and might reach Bozeman’s requirement of a reasonable
normative consensus. Meynhardt believes that public value is for
the public when it concerns “evaluations about how basic needs of
the individuals, groups, and the society as a whole are influenced in
relationships involving the public” (212). Public value is also about
value from the public, when it is “drawn from the experience of the
public.” Public value for Meynhardt, too, can refer to input, process,
output, and outcome measures.
Meynhardt posits four basic dimensions (or content categories)
of public value closely connected to a widely cited psychological
theory of basic needs (Epstsein, 1989, 1993, 2003) and related
to categories in traditional welfare economics. The categories are:
moral-ethical, political-social, utilitarian-instrumental, and hedon
istic-aesthetical. The “value” an individual attaches to an experience
is based on how well the experience satisfies his or her basic needs
as assessed against these dimensions. Note that the assessment is
a subjective, emotional-motivational, and valenced reaction to an
experience of some sort involving the “public,” such as an encounter
with a government program, an election, or visit to a public space.
Inter-subjectively equivalent assessments are a broad measure of
the extent to which public value has been created or diminished.
To summarize, Meynhardt (2009, 212) sees public value creation
as: situated in relationships between the individual and society;
founded in individuals; constituted by subjective evaluations against
basic needs; activated by and realized in emotional-motivational
states; and produced and reproduced in experience-intense practices.
In contrast to Bozeman and Moore’s approaches, Meyhnardt’s is
non-prescriptive; is far more psychologically based; and emphasizes
more the interpénétration of public and private spheres. Unlike
the other two authors, he pays little attention to the institutions
and supra-individual processes involved in public value creation.
However, like Bozeman and Moore, Meynhardt also sees public
value as measurable, in his case against the dimensions he outlines.
John Benington on the Public Sphere
Beyond public values and creating public value, there is the
public sphere. John Benington (2011) sees the public sphere as “a
democratic space” (31) that includes the “web of values, places,
organizations, rules, knowledge, and other cultural resources held
in common by people through their everyday commitments and
behaviors, and held in trust by government and public institu
tions.” It is “what provides a society with some sense of belonging,
meaning, purpose and continuity, and which enables people to
thrive and strive amid uncertainty” (43). Like Dewey (1927/1954),
he believes that the public is not given, but must be continuously
constructed. Public value is necessarily contested, and is often estab
lished through a continuous process of dialogue. For Benington,
the public sphere is thus the space—psychological, social, political,
institutional, and physical—within which public values and public
value are held, created, or diminished. Public value includes what
adds to the public sphere. While Benington himself is committed
to democracy, note that his extended definition of the public sphere
can apply to other forms of government.
Operationally, for both practitioners and scholars, determining who
and what the “public” is can be problematic (Frederickson 1991).
Nonetheless, Meynhardt (2009, 205) sees the “public” is an “indis
pensable operational fiction necessary for action and orientation in a
complex environment.” In other words, as complexity increases the
more “the public” becomes a social construct “necessary for acting,
but hard to pin down” (204).
In practical terms, the public may already be known, may need
to make itself known, or may need to be created. For example,
Moore’s normative approach requires public managers to look to
their “authorizing environments” for direction, although they may
conclude that the public can be best served by working to change
aspects of the authorizing environment. Moore also asserts that
elected officials and the citizens (often via elections) are the arbiters
of public value (1995, 38), even when political decision making
is deeply problematic on moral grounds. In democratic societies,
citizens and managers can challenge these questionable decisions,
but not ignore them (54—55). For Dewey (1927/1954), a public
is “created” when citizens experience the negative consequences
of situations beyond their control (resulting, for example, from
market or governmental activities). In other circumstances, public
administrators may need to “call a public into being” (Moore
2014a), for example, when designing and managing a public
participation process (Fung 2006; Cooper, Bryer, and Meek 2006;
Nabatchi 2012).
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Public values scholars look to a variety of sources for evidence of
what the “public” is, wants, or is good for it. Sources include, for
example, literature reviews, legislation, rules and regulations, and
opinion polls (Beck Jorgensen and Bozeman 2007; Bozeman 2007;
Jacobs 2014). Meynhardt (2009, 2014), as noted, relies on psycho
logical theory to derive the dimensions against which public values
can be assessed; he has developed and published results from the
use of psychological questionnaires based on this work. Moulton
(2009) looks to “public values institutions,” which can be of three
types, with the three types presumed to differentially affect how
public values are realized in practice. Regulatory institutions are
legally sanctioned and can establish rules, surveillance mechanisms,
and incentives to influence behavior. Normative-associative institu
tions help create expectations or norms that influence social life
via prescriptive, evaluative, or obligatory guidance. Finally, cultural
cognitive institutions help create shared conceptions of the nature of
social reality and the frames used to create meaning. The three kinds
of institutions are analytic constructs and can and do overlap in
practice. Andersen, et al. (2012) look to archetypal forms of govern
ance to derive the content of public values; the forms are hierarchy,
clans or professions, networks, and markets.
How Public Value Relates to Other Concepts
Part of public value’s importance is that it encompasses and goes
beyond several other venerable concepts that highlight the proper
ends and means of government and broader public action. Among
these are the public interest, the common good, public goods, and
commonwealth. Public interest originally was associated with the
state, not with the public sphere more generally (Gunn 1969), and
thus typically refers to the reasons for, or consequences of, govern
ment action (Alexander 2002, 226-227). Beyond that, attempts
to operationalize the public interest have proved difficult (Sorauf
1957; Mitnick 1976), although not necessarily in the case of apply
ing relatively clear public laws and regulations to specific decisions
(Alexander 2002). Vagueness and difficulties of operationalization
also plague related terms such as the common good.
Public goods refers to production of non-rival, non-excludable
goods and services. Public value differs in three ways: First, it
includes remedies to market failures beyond inadequate provision of
public goods, along with the institutional arrangements that make
the remedies possible. This fits clearly with Bozeman’s (2007) view.
Public goods are outputs and public value includes the outcomes
made possible by public goods. This fits well with Moore’s (1995)
view. Finally, public value has value for the valuer, which accords
well with Meynhardt’s (2009) approach.
Probably commonwealth comes closest to capturing the meaning of
public value, since the term originally meant “common well-being.”
In the U.S. from the colonial era through the World War II era, as
Boyte (1989) points out, commonwealth meant two things. First, it
meant a republican or democratic government of equals concerned
with the general welfare and an active citizenry throughout the year.
Second, the term “brought to mind the touchstone, or common
foundations, of public life—the basic resources and public goods
of a community over which citizens assumed responsibility and
authority” (4-5). Thus, while similar to public value in meaning,
commonwealth is not the same. The identification with a repub
lican or democratic government narrows the definition, while the
common foundations of public life are more closely related to the
idea of the public sphere.
How the Ideas of Creating Public Value and Policy-Level
and Societal Public Values Are Used in Practice and
Research
The different strands in the public value literature clearly can be
linked. Specifically, Moore’s managerially focused idea of creating
public value involves producing what the public values or is good
for the public, the merits of which can be assessed against a set of
more specific public values. These can include Bozeman’s and others’
societal or policy-focused public value criteria, Meynhardts’ psycho
logically focused criteria, Benington’s idea of enhancing the public
sphere, and other important values in the public administration
field and literature. All may or should be considered when assessing
value creation in specific instances.
Uses of the Creating Public Value Idea in Practice and Research
The idea of creating public value has been used as a paradigm, rhet
oric, narrative, and kind of performance (Alford and O’Flynn 2009,
178-185). Stoker (2006) has proposed “public value management”
as a new paradigm better suited to networked governance than tra
ditional public administration or the New Public Management. He
is thus moving beyond Moore’s primary focus on public managers at
the top of a public bureaucracy delivering services or obligations to
a focus on networked inter-organizational and cross-sector relations
and governance.
Stoker makes the case that traditional public administration and
New Public Management are not up to the job of managing in a
networked public environment, but he only vaguely considers how
leaders and managers in specific instances would achieve efficiency,
accountability, and equity, along with broader democratic values
(Williams and Shearer 2011; O’Flynn 2007). Nor does he explain
how leaders and managers should cope with a democracy having
problems with low voter turnout, divided government, compet
ing organized interests, and competing conceptions of what public
value might be in any situation (Davis and West 2009; Jacobs
2014).
Critics of public value argue that it has been used as a rhetorical
strategy to protect and advance the interests of bureaucrats and
their organizations (Roberts 1995). The criticism unquestionably
has merit in particular cases. As noted above, Dahl and Soss (2014)
also highlight the potential of public value rhetoric to undermine
democratic processes. Smith (2004, 68—69), however, believes
that a “focus on public value enables one to bring together debates
about values, institutions, systems, processes and people. It also
enables one to link insights from different analytical perspectives,
including public policy, policy analysis, management, economics,
and political science.” Similarly, Fisher (2014) offers a narrative
that contrasts an oppositional approach to public decision mak
ing (public-private, black-white; right-wrong; mine-yours) with an
“opposable” or integrative approach wherein public managers can
link seemingly unrelated, or contradictory, and sometimes para
doxical constructs to achieve a higher level of public value across
sectors. The stories managers create thus can be self-serving rheto
ric, but also can be a public-regarding story about what should be,
or has been, created.
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Finally, as performance, public value can serve as a performance
measurement and management framework. A key advantage
of the public value idea is that there is no single bottom line
(Kalambokidis (2014). Moore (2013, 2014a, 2014b), for example,
proposes that managers look at costs and benefits, but also at less
tangible aspects when they assess public value creation. Bozeman
(2002; 2007) and Talbot (2010) argue for using a variety of public
value criteria to discern how much public value has been created
or diminished. A focus on public value also stimulates attention to
the long-term viability and reliability of public investments (Fisher
2014).
A number of governments have made explicit or implicit use of the
public value framework. Kernaghan (2003), for example, exam
ines the values statements of four Westminster-style governments;
each contains a range of values beyond efficiency. The “joined-up
government,” “whole-of-government,” and collaborative governance
initiatives that developed in many countries in response to the frag
mentation caused by New Public Management were about coordi
nation and also about recovery and pursuit of public values beyond
narrowly defined results and efficiency (Christensen and Ltegreid
2007). Unfortunately, some of these efforts have used excessively
narrow interpretations of public value. For example, the British
government under Tony Blair made explicit use of public value as
a way of thinking about performance, but operationalized Moore’s
strategic triangle by focusing on services (for operational capabil
ity), outcomes (for public value), and trust and legitimacy (for
the authorizing environment) (Kelly, Mulgan, and Muers 2002).
Accenture consultants Cole and Parston (2006) further dimin
ish the meaning of public value. Their approach just repackages
existing approaches to performance measurement and management
under a different label (Afford and O’Flynn 2009, 185). Dahl and
Soss’s (2014) cautions about the ease with which the public value
approach can be hijacked for purposes not intended by its principal
authors is on clear display.
The various approaches to creating public value can be used
positively or normatively—and have been. Williams and Shearer
(2011, 1374) observe, however, that “the most striking feature is
the relative absence of empirical investigation of either the norma
tive propositions of public value or its efficacy as a framework for
understanding public management.” They do note, however, some
exemplary studies. For example, O’Toole, Meier and Nicholson
Crotty (2005) found in a large-N study of Texas school superintend
ents that the superintendents saw the points of Moore’s triangle as
constitutive of their roles. And Meynhardt and Metelmann (2009)
in a study of the German Federal Labor Agency also found evidence
that middle managers think in much the same way as Moore’s pub
lic value entrepreneurs would.
Uses of Policy-Level and Societal Public Values in Practice and
Research
Policy-level and broader public values have also been used in a
variety of ways. For example, public values feature prominently in
the approach Bozeman and his coauthors have developed called
“public value mapping.” The approach incorporates a broad range of
value considerations in policy decision-making processes by helping
(1) identify public values; (2) assess whether or not public value
failures have occurred; (3) map relationships among values; and (4)
graphically represent relationships between public value failures and
market failures (Welch, Rimes, and Bozeman 2014). The approach
has been used primarily in the science and technology field (e.g.,
Bozeman and Sarewitz 2011), but increasingly in other fields
(Bozeman and Moulton 2011, i367).
Meynhardt (2014) has developed a public value assessment instru
ment called the public value scorecard (not to be confused with
Moore’s 2013, 2014b public value scorecard). The scorecard is an
aggregated summary based on individuals’ rankings of the value of
something related to the public along the dimensions mentioned
earlier—moral-ethical, hedonistic-aesthetical, utilitarian-instru
mental, and political-social—as well as a fifth dimension related to
financial performance (Meynhardt 2014). The scorecard has been
used in a variety of situations for both formative and summative
purposes.
Andersen, et al. (2012) have developed a third instrument for
assessing public values that relies not on public value criteria or
psychological assessments, but instead on what they call “organi
zational design principles” derived from four archetypal modes of
governance (hierarchy, clan, network, and market) (717). For each
of the four they articulated the role of public organizations, role of
citizens, organizational context, control forms, and central values.
From these values they developed an instrument they tested on
Danish public managers by asking them to what extent the values
applied to their organizations. After a variety of analyses, seven
dimensions of public value emerged: the public at large, rule abid
ance, budget keeping, professionalism, balancing interests, efficient
supply, and user focus. Their work highlights tensions among the
values and the complexity of public managers’ values environments
(723-724).
Conclusions
Scholars and public professionals are making important theoretical,
practical, and operational strides in developing a new approach to
public administration as an alternative to approaches that preceded
it. They need to do more, however, before the new approach is
widely understood, appreciated, and used to advance important
public values underplayed by traditional public administration
and New Public Management. In this final section we offer some
tentative conclusions about where things stand and then outline an
agenda for research and practice.
Where Things Stand
While there clearly is an emerging new approach to public admin
istration, it does not have a consensually agreed name. Among the
various possibilities, however, the Denhardts’ (2011) label the New
Public Service certainly appears to be the leading contender based
on citations. Whatever the name, attention to issues of public value,
public values, and the public sphere are central to the new approach.
The concept of creating public value is popular within both aca
demic and practice settings (Williams and Shearer 2011). Even crit
ics note the broad interest in the idea among practitioners (Rhodes
and Wanna 2007). Similarly, Van der Wal, Nabatchi, and de Graaf
(2013) assert that the study of public values is gaining in impor
tance in public administration and may well be one of the field’s
most important current themes. Finally, for several decades scholars
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and political commentators have devoted increased attention to the
public sphere, including debates about the limits and role of govern
ment, the why and how of public engagement and active citizen
ship, and the need for a strengthened democracy.
This growing interest is in part due to the importance, urgency,
scope, and scale of public problems facing the world; the pragmatic
recognition that governments alone cannot effectively address many
of these problems; and a concern that public values have been and
will be lost as a result of a powerful anti-government rhetoric and
a host of market-based and performance-based reforms. Following
Dewey, the public value literature and the emerging approach to
public administration represent the products of a practitioner and
scholarly “public called into being” over these concerns.
In the emerging approach government clearly has a special role
to play as a creator of public value and guarantor of public values
and the public sphere, but in a market-based democracy, govern
ment is not the owner of all the processes and institutions having
public value potential or obligations (Peters and Pierre 1998). The
literatures on cross-sector collaboration, integrative leadership,
and networked governance are all responses to the new context, in
which public managers frequently must collaborate with nonprofits,
businesses, the media, and citizens to accomplish public purposes. A
major contribution of the public value literature is the way it draws
attention to questions about: (a) the public purposes that are or
should be served by organizations in all sectors, by intra- and cross
sector collaborations, by more general governance arrangements,
and by public leadership broadly defined; and (b) how public man
agers and leaders do and should accomplish these purposes. These
are important normative and research-related questions needing to
be pursued in the new context.
Of course, the concern with purposes and values is hardly new to
public administration; what is different are two different parts of the
context. The first is that traditional public administration and the
New Public Management—while they both have strengths—are not
up to the tasks of networked governance, leadership, and manage
ment when a variety of public values should be served, including,
but hardly limited to, efficiency, effectiveness, and equity. The
second is the view that terms such as the public interest and com
monwealth are too narrow, other related terms such as the common
good are too vague, and the language of public value provides a
helpful way forward, as Jacobs (2014) suggests.
A Research and Practice Agenda
Right now the new approach is enmeshed in often vague defini
tions, conceptualizations, and measurements of public value and the
public sphere. While public administration scholars and practition
ers may ultimately agree on these public value-related matters, they
are unlikely to reach full consensus (Davis and West 2009). That
is not necessarily a bad thing. In order to make progress, however,
scholars should address the challenges to current formulations, in
part through further conceptual refinement, the development of
suitable typologies and measures, and rigorous empirical testing.
Research should attend to both subjectively held public values and
more objective states of the world; whether a specific public value
is intrinsic, extrinsic, or relational; whether something is a prime or
instrumental public value; whether there are hierarchies of public
values; who does the valuing; how the valuing is done; and against
what criteria the object of value is measured.
The public value literature does provide a broader sense of public
values than typically found in traditional public administration
and New Public Management. As the emerging approach to public
administration unfolds, the public value literature should be explic
itly incorporated, since the issues it addresses are so fundamental.
For example, too many performance measurement and management
regimes and models focus principally on efficiency and effective
ness directly related to the mission (Radin 2006; 2012; Talbot
2010; Moynihan et al. 2011), and disregard what Rosenbloom
(2007) terms non-mission-based values, such as equity, due process,
freedom of information, and citizenship development. As a result,
too many performance measurement and management schemes may
actually weaken public value creation (Kroll and Moynihan 2014).
Practitioners thus should work to ensure performance measure
ment and management approaches do include non-mission-based
values and at the very least do not diminish democratic engagement
and citizenship behavior. Rosenbloom’s (2007) contribution has
been noted. Moore (2013, 2014b) has also made a start on some
of these concerns with his proposed public value account, as does
Meynhardt (2014) with his very different public value account.
Bozeman and his colleagues’ public value mapping model also
makes a contribution. Similarly, public participation processes
can be designed to enhance democratic behavior and citizenship
(Natachi 2012; Bryson, et al. 2013). Finally, policy analysis as well
should include a broad array of values beyond its traditional focus
on efficiency, effectiveness, and sometimes equity (Radin, 2013).
Practitioners and scholars also should follow Australia’s lead, for
example, and draw attention to the expected and actual public value
created by policies, programs, projects, and other efforts (Kernaghan
2003). As Jacobs (2014) demonstrates in a U.S. context, the public
is “pragmatically liberal”; that is, the public is quite willing to sup
port particular public undertakings when the value is clear and the
cost is reasonable. Moore’s public value account offers a way of mak
ing the case in specific circumstances. Kalambokidis (2014) provides
practical advice on some of the ways in which this public value-clar
ifying work can be done in relation to fiscal and spending policy.
Given the complex networked and collaborative arrangements
practitioners now often find themselves in, they have a heightened
need to cultivate what Moore calls a “restless, value-seeking imagi
nation” in a democratic context; and public affairs scholars and
educators should help them in this effort. That imagination also
should incorporate attention to government’s special role in assur
ing concern for important values and standing firm against efforts
to diminish them (Dahl and Soss, 2014). Again, the need for
imagination is not new to public administration, where creativity,
innovation, and strategic thinking and acting have always found
a place (Osborne and Brown 2013; ffartley 2014; Bryson 2011).
Such imagination often involves bridging the politics-administra
tion divide (Gulick 1933; Appleby 1945), but also knowing when
to defer to elected officials (Afford, Hartley, and Hughes 2014). In
all these cases, public administrators have a special obligation to
turn their imaginations to enhancing democratic governance and
citizenship. As noted, policy analysis also can help foster imagina
tive responses and attention to the array of public values (Radin
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2012). Clearly, however, the public value literature should explore
much further the conceptual, political, organizational, managerial,
and other limits on public managers seeking to create public value
in particular circumstances.
Institutions and processes matter for the creation of public value,
the realization of public values, and the preservation and enhance
ment of the public sphere (Talbot 2010; Benington and Moore
2011; West and Davis 2011; Radin 2012; Dahl and Soss 2014;
Jacobs 2014; Moore 2014a; Kalambokidis 2014; Budd 2014). The
research on performance management regimes makes this clear.
Such regimes and the institutions and processes that produce and
sustain them and what the consequences are for public value should
be the focus of much additional work. The same is true of collabora
tive, networked governance processes. Work thus should continue
on linking managerial behavior attempting to create public value
with institutions and processes and policy-level and other important
public values related to democratic and collaborative governance
(Beck Jorgensen and Bozeman 2007).
Another part of that work is to bring in scholarship from other
fields to help enrich the conversation at a time when the public
administration can be viewed as too insular (Wright 2011). We look
forward to continued research and learning that will determine
whether the public value literature will override the challenges and
take a permanent place in the ongoing development of the field of
public administration scholarship and practice.
Notes
This introduction and the symposium articles stem from an international
conference on “Creating Public Value in a Multi-Sector, Shared-Power World”
at the University of Minnesota, September 20—22, 2012. The conference was
co-sponsored by three units of the University of Minnesota: the Hubert H.
Humphrey School of Public Affairs, the Carlson School of Management, and
the Center for Integrative Leadership. The Minnesota Humanities Center was a
cosponsor.
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- Contents
- Issue Table of Contents
p. 445
p. 446
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p. 448
p. 449
p. 450
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PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REVIEW, Vol. 74, No. 4 (JULY/AUGUST 2014) pp. 435-550
Front Matter
PERSPECTIVE
Vision without Execution Is Hallucination [pp. 439-441]
In Seoul, the Citizens Are the Mayor [pp. 442-443]
A Simple Lesson about the Power of Collaboration [pp. 444-444]
SYMPOSIUM: EXPLORING THE VALUE OF PUBLIC VALUE
Symposium Introduction
Public Value Governance: Moving beyond Traditional Public Administration and the New Public Management [pp. 445-456]
Perspective
Public Value and the Integrative Mind: How Multiple Sectors Can Collaborate in City Building [pp. 457-464]
Public Value Accounting: Establishing the Philosophical Basis [pp. 465-477]
Commentary: “Public Value” and the Measurement of Government Performance: The Shift to Subjective Metrics [pp. 478-479]
The Contested Politics of Public Value [pp. 480-494]
Commentary: Value-Driven Public Policy Likely Requires Value-Driven Public Servants [pp. 494-495]
Neoliberalism for the Common Good? Public Value Governance and the Downsizing of Democracy [pp. 496-504]
Commentary: Public Value Governance or Real Democracy [pp. 504-505]
Implicit Public Values and the Creation of Publicly Valuable Outcomes: The Importance of Work and the Contested Role of Labor Unions [pp. 506-516]
Commentary: The Prospects for Labor’s Role in Redefining Public Values [pp. 516-517]
Commentary: The Paralysis of Analysis [pp. 517-518]
Creating Public Value with Tax and Spending Policies: The View from Public Economics [pp. 519-526]
Commentary: Is the Public Economics Toolbox Applicable to Budget Analysis? [pp. 527-528]
Book Reviews
Illuminating the East Again: The Rapid Modernization of South Korean Government [pp. 529-532]
Can Democracy Survive Democracy? [pp. 532-535]
Using Legitimacy as an Organizing Lens for Public Administration [pp. 535-539]
Regulatory Capture Recaptured [pp. 539-542]
Taking a Relational Turn in Leadership Studies [pp. 542-544]
Agencification [pp. 545-549]
Back Matter