1st Edition

Complexity Theory in Public Administration

Edited By Elizabeth Anne Eppel, Mary Lee Rhodes Copyright 2020
    172 Pages
    by Routledge

    172 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book reframes theoretical, methodological and practical approaches to public administration by drawing on complexity theory concepts.



    It aims to provide alternative perspectives on the theory, research and practice of public administration, avoiding assumptions of traditional theory-building. The contributors explain both how ongoing non-linear interactions result in macro patterns becoming established in a complexity-informed world view, and the implications of these dynamics. Complexity theory explains the way in which many repeated non-linear interactions among elements within a whole can result in processes and patterns emerging without design or direction, thus necessitating a reconsideration of the predictability and controllability of many aspects of public administration.



    As well as illustrating how complexity theory informs new research methods for studying this field, the book also shines a light on the different practices required of public administrators to cope with the complexity encountered in the public policy and public management fields. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Public Management Review journal.

    Introduction – Complexity theory and public management: a ‘becoming’ field

    Elizabeth Anne Eppel and Mary Lee Rhodes

    1. Association between decisions: experiments with coupled two-person games

    Peter Koenraad Marks and Lasse M. Gerrits

    2. Understanding the influence of values in complex systems-based approaches to public policy and management

    Philip Haynes

    3. ‘What insights do fitness landscape models provide for theory and practice in public administration?’

    Mary Lee Rhodes and Conor Dowling

    4. Engaging with complexity in a public programme implementation

    Walter Castelnovo and Maddalena Sorrentino

    5. Bridging complexity theory and hierarchies, markets, networks, communities: a ‘population genetics’ framework for understanding institutional change from within

    Tim Tenbensel

    6. Utilizing complexity theory to explore sustainable responses to intimate partner violence in health care

    Claire Gear, Elizabeth Eppel and Jane Koziol-Mclain

    7. Sustainability of collaborative networks in higher education research projects: why complexity? Why now?

    Amanda Scott, Geoff Woolcott, Robyn Keast and Daniel Chamberlain

    8. Cultivating resiliency through system shock: the Southern California metropolitan water management system as a complex adaptive system

    Jack W. Meek and Kevin S. Marshall

    Biography

    Elizabeth Anne Eppel is a Senior Research and Teaching Fellow in the School of Government at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Her research interests are complexity in public policy processes, governance networks, and collaborative governance.



    Mary Lee Rhodes is Associate Professor of Public Management at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. Her research is focused on complex public service systems and the dynamics of performance. Her current research is on the nature and dynamics of social innovation and impact, and she is developing research on social finance, and resilience of urban systems.