1st Edition

Public Management and Vulnerability Contextualising Change

Edited By Gareth Addidle, Joyce Liddle Copyright 2021
    258 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    258 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book locates the issue of ‘vulnerability’ in an international context, within public-sector reform processes, and goes beyond the conceptualization of existing concepts of policing and vulnerability to include multi- and intra-agency working. It uncovers many competing and contradictory conceptualisations of the phenomenon and shows how a variety of agencies in different jurisdictions prioritise and operationalise this escalating 21st-century social problem.

    Two recurring themes of this edited collection are the ways in which non-state organisations and agencies have become an acknowledged feature of modern service delivery, and how the withdrawal of the state has heralded a perceptive shift from collective or community provision towards the stigmatization of individuals. Increasingly, public service professionals and ‘street level bureaucrats’ work in collaboration with non-state agents to attempt to ameliorate vulnerability. Chapter contributions were deliberately drawn from combinatory empirical, theoretical, policy and practice fields, and diverse academic and policy/professional authors. Editors and authors deliberately cast their nets widely to provide integrative scholarship, and contributions from international perspectives to confirm the complexity; and how socio/cultural, political and historic antecedents shape the definitions and responses to vulnerability.

    This collection will appeal to academics, policy makers and practitioners in a wide variety of disciplines, such as public management and leadership, criminology, policing, social policy, social work, and business management, and any others with an interest in or responsibility for dealing with the issue of vulnerability.

    1. Introduction: Contested Perspectives on Vulnerability: Which Groups Are Vulnerable and Why?  2. Beyond Public Services: The Era of New Public Populism  3. The Impact of Brexit on Vulnerability: Using a Theoretical Lens of Transnational and Local Linkages  4. Vulnerability A Collective or Individual/Agency Issue? Has Vulnerability Replaced Community Safety in the UK and Are We Stigmatising the Individual?  5. Responding to Vulnerability in Practice- Ambulance, Police and Fire and Rescue Services  6. Professional Vulnerability in the UK Public Sector: The Social Work Operational Environment  7. Virtually Vulnerable: Why Digital Technology Challenges the Fundamental Concepts of Vulnerability and Risk  8. Relational Pressure and Policing Vulnerable Populations in China  9. UK Immigration Policy: Asylum Seeker and Refugee Vulnerability  10. Responding to Ageing Demographics: A Positive View From a Public Administration and Public Policy Perspective  11. The Important Voices of Care Experienced People in Relation to Services  12. Lesson Drawing for Theory, Policy and Practice: Developing a Future Research Agenda

    Biography

    Gareth David Addidle is a Senior Lecturer in Policing at Teesside University, UK, where he teaches on the undergraduate and postgraduate Policing and Criminology programmes.

    Joyce Liddle is Professor of Public Leadership and Enterprise, Director of Research and KE, Newcastle BS, Northumbria, UK.