In the aftermath of major crises governments turn to public inquiries to learn lessons. Inquiries often challenge established authority, frame heroes and villains in the public spotlight and deliver courtroom-like drama to hungry journalists. As such, they can become high-profile political stories in their own right. Inquiries also have a policy learning mandate with big implications because they are ultimately responsible for identifying policy lessons which, if implemented, should keep us safe from the next big event. However, despite their high-profile nature and their position as the pre-eminent means of learning about crises, we still know very little about what inquiries produce in terms of learning and what factors influence their effectiveness in this regard. In light of this, the question that animates this book is as important as it is simple. Can post-crisis inquiries deliver effective lesson-learning which will reduce our vulnerability to future threats? Conventional wisdom suggests that the answer to this question should be an emphatic no. Outside of the academy, for example, inquiries are regularly vilified as costly wastes of time that illuminate very little while inside social scientists echo similar concerns, regularly describing inquiries as unhelpful. These commentaries, however, lack robust, generalizable evidence to support their claims. This volume provides evidence from the first international comparison of post-crisis inquiries in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom, which shows that, contrary to conventional wisdom, the post-crisis inquiry is an effective means of policy learning after crises and that they consistently encourage policy reforms that enhance our resilience to future threats.
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This book examines the extent to which post-crisis inquiries actually do deliver effective lesson-learning and thereby reduce vulnerability to future threats
1: Failing to Learn: The State or the Academy? 2: Types of Policy Learning and the Inquiry Process 3: Inquiry Agents and their Logics for Action 4: Priming the Analysis 5: Lesson-Learning and Resilience to Future Crises 6: Crafting and Forgetting Policy Lessons 7: Policy Refiners and Street-Level Lesson Learners 8: Logics for Action and Conventional Wisdom Conclusion
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Provides the first international comparison of post-crisis inquiries Delivers the first analysis of inquiries to use a wealth of interview data from inquiry relevant actors (100 interviews with political and policy elites) Provides the first robust defence of the public inquiry as a policy learning mechanism Offers a reconceptualization of the public inquiry that recognises contemporary context and policy scholarship
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Alastair Stark is a Lecturer in Public Policy at the University of Queensland. His recent publications include Risk and Crisis Management in the Public Sector (with A McConnell and L Drennan, Routledge, 2015).
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Provides the first international comparison of post-crisis inquiries Delivers the first analysis of inquiries to use a wealth of interview data from inquiry relevant actors (100 interviews with political and policy elites) Provides the first robust defence of the public inquiry as a policy learning mechanism Offers a reconceptualization of the public inquiry that recognises contemporary context and policy scholarship
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198831990
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
498 gr
Høyde
241 mm
Bredde
164 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
218

Forfatter

Biographical note

Alastair Stark is a Lecturer in Public Policy at the University of Queensland. His recent publications include Risk and Crisis Management in the Public Sector (with A McConnell and L Drennan, Routledge, 2015).