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Motivating Ministers to Morality

Ian Holland Jenny Fleming

$67.99

Paperback

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English
Routledge
16 January 2019
This book discusses the most prominent subjects - and occasional victims - of the ethics debate: government ministers.

Political ethics is a rapidly growing field in disciplines such as political science, philosophy, applied ethics and public policy and it has become a major topic in current affairs’ reporting of politics. It is the first major work to discuss institutional reforms around the world that target ministerial morality and asks: how are these reforms influencing the motivation and conduct of the most powerful of our politicians?

The book provides unique insights into ministerial behaviour and the changing role of institutions in influencing the ethics of the executive, with analyses from around the world. Contributors to the volume include international high-profile players in political ethics. They include Lord Nolan, the first Chairman of Britain's Joint Parliamentary Committee on Standards in Public Life; Professor Robert J. Jackson, a leading Canadian political scientist instrumental in establishing the Canadian Office of the Ethics Counsellor; and Associate Professor Noel Preston, the leading commentator on ethics in Australian politics, who has been involved in developing a number of its ethical regimes.

By:  
Edited by:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 219mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   453g
ISBN:   9781138704961
ISBN 10:   1138704962
Series:   Routledge Revivals
Pages:   252
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Primary ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Jenny Fleming is a Research Fellow in the Key Centre for Ethics Law Justice and Governance at Griffith University. She completed her doctorate at Griffith on public policy initiatives of new governments and is a former lecturer in the University's Faculty of Commerce and Management. Her research interests include party politics and the politics of criminal justice and police unionism, on which she has published widely. Ian Holland is a Research Fellow in the Key Centre for Ethics Law Justice and Governance at Griffith University. He was formerly lecturer in environmental policy and politics in the University's Faculty of Environmental Sciences. He has degrees from Sydney University, the University of New England and Griffith University. He has published on environmental policy and politics.

Reviews for Motivating Ministers to Morality

’This book is a stimulating and comprehensive international investigation of one of the major challenges to modern governments worldwide - regaining the public respect and authority lost by the real and perceived failures in ministerial accountability and by unethical practices in government. It should be read by anyone, both inside and outside government, interested in ways of improving ethical standards in public life. The authors, practitioners and public policy academics from a number of countries, combine informed case study analysis with penetrating discussion of the broader issues involved.’ Professor John Warhurst, Australian National University, Canberra ’The tabloid headlines scream sleaze. Are you tired of their hysterical claims? Ministers evade responsibility for their political and administrative failings? Are you tired of their special pleadings? Jenny Fleming, Ian Holland and their colleagues put the topic of ministerial ethics under the microscope, teasing out the tensions and contradictions inherent in parliamentary systems where party control buttresses executive power. They offer no easy institutional fixes, no unambiguous codes of conduct, but a welcome appreciation of the complexities of political life with an insistence on the need for a context which motivates ministers to meet public expectations about the right way to behave. If you crave dispassionate analysis on this overheated topic, look no further.’ Professor Rod Rhodes, Newcastle University, UK ’This edited collection is a great asset to political science and public administration and it should be incorporated into the must-read list for students studying political corruption.’ Governance ’Consistent quality across all sixteen chapters of the book means a useful addition to the existing literature on the ethical behaviour of political elites.’ Parliamentary Affairs '...the three overvies chapters that conclude the book are excellent in addressin


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