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Post-Traditional Public Administration Theory: For Better Governmental Praxis === This 2021 book is a compendium of previously published chapters from
Administrative Theory and Praxis with an introduction by Farmer. The postmodern is a common point of departure for the 13 papers in this book as the writers explore topics relevant to public administration and policy-making. Postmodernism is one of the philosophical meta-frameworks that offers profound insights - as well as difficulties - not only for social and political understanding but also for thinking and practice in interpreting and addressing the macro and longer-term problematics of bureaucracy.
Beyond Public Administration: Contemplating and Nudging Government-in-Context This 2020 book asks the reader to contemplate how public administration (P.A.) or other discipline can provide leadership in helping American government to govern fundamentally better in terms of policy. Government-in-context, meaning government-in-totality, is useful for contemplation and nudging. It explains contemplation of the powerfully constricting contextual features of a mal-trinity of infiltration, exfiltration, and post-truth. Practical plans for P.A. leadership to assist in impacting the mal-trinity are explained in terms of 18 sets of aims or nudges. Nudge is a term associated with the prods used in Behavioral Economics, and a nudge used in this book can be a prod, a shove, or a hammer blow. Four tentative P.A. leadership stages (or steps) are proposed and described.
To Kill the King: Post-traditional Governance and Bureaucracy This 2005 book discusses a post-traditional consciousness that aims to revitalize governance and bureaucracy.
To Kill the King explains such consciousness in terms of three concepts analyzed as thinking as play, justice as seeking, and practice as art. It describes a post-traditional consciousness of governance that can yield improvements in the quality of life for each individual and for future generations. The publisher claims that the book aims to "capture the heart, and enlarge the soul, of reform movements within the study of governance and bureaucracy." O.C. McSwite, formerly of Virginia Tech and George Washington Universities, wrote: "I consider this book to be a major and distinctive contribution to the field of public administration and to the discourse about the future of government in the United States as well" (O.C. McSwite, 2009, p. 303).
Papers on the Art of Anti-Administration The postmodern is a common point of departure for the 13 papers in this 1998 book as the writers explore topics relevant to public administration and policy-making. Postmodernism is one of the philosophical meta-frameworks that offers profound insights - as well as difficulties - not only for social and political understanding but also for thinking and practice in interpreting and addressing the macro and longer-term problematics of bureaucracy. /ref>
The Language of Public Administration: Bureaucracy, Modernity and Postmodernity. This 1995 book argues that modern public administration theory, although valuable, is limiting as an explanatory and catalytic force in resolving problems about the functioning of public bureaucracy and in transforming public bureaucracy into a more positive force.
The Language of Public Administration (1995) specifies a reflexive language paradigm for public administration thinking. It aims to show how the study and practice of public administration can be reinvigorated. Dr. Alexander Kouzmin (Southern Cross University and University of South Australia) writes that “Unrivalled by peers, Dr. Farmer has a vibrant language of public administration transgressing what is sayable and what is un-sayable (A. Kouzmin, 2011, p. 803).
The Language of Public Administration was listed as one of the candidate books for “great books of public administration, 1990-2010” (Meier & O’Toole, 2012, p. 890).
The Language of Public Administration has been translated into Chinese and Korean. It was translated into Chinese in 2005. The Korean translation was published in 1999 by Pakyoung Publishing Company.
Public Administration in Perspective: Theory and Practice through Multiple Lenses The 2010 book explains and illustrates how public administration can benefit from epistemic pluralism – just as can any other action or social science discipline, currently operating essentially within its own disciplinary cul-de-sac.
Public Administration in Perspective (2010) explains that epistemic refers to knowing; pluralism refers to more than one way. The book offers an example of a grand strategy of epistemic pluralism. It examines public administration theory and practice from perspectives that include a traditional, a business, an economic, a political, a critical theory, a post-structural, a psychoanalytic, a neuroscience, a feminist, an ethical, and a data lens. It begins by quoting
Dwight Waldo’s claim that “administrative thought must establish a working relationship with every major province in the realm of human learning.” Dr. Breena Coates (California State University, San Bernardino) writes about
Public Administration in Perspective that the “author provides unique and, hitherto, unexplored perspectives from which to view the multiple faces of public administration… The book’s scholarship is compelling and hard to resist… Today in our networked, globalized environment we are more than ever coming to the realization that there is an interdisciplinary basis for understanding truth, and that each discrete branch of knowledge studies a mere subset of particularized knowledge streams” (B. Coates, 2012, p. 133.)
''Being in Time: The Nature of Time in Light of McTaggart's Paradox'' Following and analyzing the philosopher John McTaggart, this 1990 book discusses two views or conceptions of time. One corresponds to the 'ordinary' position, and the other to the 'received wisdom' position of Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein. Avoiding such prejudicial titles, the two views are called the tensed (the A-theory) and the tenseless (the B-theory) conceptions of time. The varied ways in which philosophers have fleshed out the specifics of the tensed and tenseless views are contemplated in the book.
Crime Control: The Use and Misuse of Police Resources The 1984 book presents a comprehensive examination of police resources allocation decision making and documents research indicating opportunities for better utilization of police resources. The publisher of this 1984 book (Crime Control) claims that the book should be read by "those working in the fields of law and society, criminology, sociology, political science, criminal law, and criminal justice." The former N.Y.P.D. Police Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy wrote of this book that “In recent years, American policing has benefited greatly from the observations and analyses of scholars and researchers, particularly when they have had on-line experience in police agencies at one or another stage in their careers. David J. Farmer is a scholar who has had such experience, which adds a special dimension to his observations and conclusions” (Patrick V. Murphy, 1984, p. vii.) ==References==