I was slightly distracted when I wrote the last post - by the English poet Philip Larkin whose book The Complete Poems of Philip Larkin (ed Archie Burnett 2012) I had pulled down from the shelves and started to read – leading me in turn to download both it and two others about the poet
Philip Larkin – selected poems ed Gilroy (2009) which is less a selection
of his poems and more a commentary on his work.
Philip Larkin – Letters Home 1936-1977 ed James Booth (2012) which is
Larkin was the poet who wrote Annus Mirabilis which begins
Sexual
intercourse began
In nineteen sixty-three
(which was rather
late for me) -
Between the end of the "Chatterley"
ban
And the Beatles' first LP.
The last post may have created some confusion in readers between the State
(as an inanimate object - which continues to fascinate me) and the government
of the day – about which I am much less interested. It’s passing strange that
the State arouses so little interest amongst citizens. You would have thought
that an organisation which controls such a large part of our lives and manages
such a huge budget would have been of interest. But it’s the Government of the
day that attracts the attention and ire rather than the functions of the state and the recent debate about the DEEP STATE (in right-wing circles) is little
more than a gross oversimplification. To help readers, I’ve extracted this list of
books about the state from one of the Annexes to the current draft of my The
Search for Democracy – a long journey
The State in theory and practice Harold Laski 1923
The State in Capitalist Society Ralph Miliband (1970) a highly readable account which is vastly superior to the literature on “the Establishment” (Jones, Sampson, Scott).
Bob Jessop is a British sociologist who is probably the world’s foremost theoretician of the State with The Capitalist State in 1982; The Future of the Capitalist State in 2002 and The State – past, present and future in 2016. These are not easy reads. I would suggest instead Christopher Pierson’s The Modern State (2nd ed 2004)
The Private Government of Public Money by Hugh Heclo and Aaron Wildavsky (1974) which made a boring subject (how the UK Treasury controls the budget) really sexy!
B Guy Peters’ The Politics of Bureaucracy – an introduction to comparative public administration (1978) was probably the first comparative and sociological approach to the subject
Approaches to the State – alternative conceptions and historical dynamics useful
Bringing the State Back In ed Evans and T Skocpol (1985)
the classic study Bureaucracy – what government agencies do and why they do it JQ Wilson (1989).
Chris Hood was one of three academics I came to rely on in the 1990s for clear, insighful analyses of UK public administration (Chris Pollitt and Rod Rhodes were the other two). And in 1991 he produced a masterful article analysing the new public management (NPM) A Public Management for all Seasons?
Managing Core Public Services; David McKevitt (1998) was a useful textbook for its analysis of the distinctiveness of public services
The History of Government Sam Finer 1999 some 1700 pages
Captive State – the corporate takeover of Britain by investigative journalist George Monbiot (2000) was the start of my painful realisation that UK politics was not as pure as I had imagined.
In Praise of Bureaucracy; Paul du Gay (2000) A wonderful defence of a much maligned institution
The Modern State (2nd ed 2004) C Pierson. A far easier read than Jessop
The Middle Aging of New Public Management - into the age of paradox?; C Hood and B Guy Peters; The Journal of Public Admin Research 2004
The Civil Service Commission – a bureau biography 1855-1991 by Richard Chapman (2005) was then the best guide to civil service reform in the UK.
”Good and Bad Power – the ideals and betrayals of government”; Geoff Mulgan (2006). One of the moČ™t interesting books about the state.
”The Social Construction of Public Administratian” Jong Jun (2006) an early and promising post-modern take on the subject by a South Korean
The Innovative Bureaucracy – bureaucracy in a time of fluidity; Alexander Styhre 2007 – a highly original account of a much-maligned system
Public Administration – the interdisciplinary approach to government; J Raadschelders (2011) A Dutch scholar whose specialism is the history of the subject
A Theory of Governance Mark Bevir (2013) a British political scientist who, with Rod Rhodes, adopts an interpretive and postmodern approach
The American Deep State – Wall St, Big Oil and the struggle for American Democracy by Peter Dale Scott (2015)
Rebalancing Society – radical reform beyond left, right and centre Henry Mintzberg (2015) was a superb summary of how corporate greed had upset the balance which trade unions and government had supplied in the postwar period to corporate power
The Deep State – the fall of the constitution and the rise of a shadow government Mike Lofgren (2016) – US oriented
Dismembered – the ideological attack on the state Polly Toynbee and David Walker (2017) a more popular book
The Rise of Managerial Bureaucracy – reforming the British civil service by L Castellani (2018) updates Chapman’s book
History of the Deep State by Jeremy Stone (2018) only 82 pages
Reimagining the State – theoretical challenges and transformative possibilities ed J Newman 2019
The Three Ages of Government – from the person to the group to the world Jos Raadschelders (2020) This is the book I’ve been waiting for. TABLE 1.1. State concepts and characteristics and what they mean for the role of government gives 20 definitions.
Out of the Belly of Hell Anthony Barnett (2021) an extended essay which places Covid in the context of the key “turning points” of the past half century
The Return of the State – restructuring Britain for the Common Good Ed by Patrick Allen et al (2021)
The Deep State – a history of secret agendas and shadow governments Ian Fitzgerald (2021) only 94 pages
The Return of the State – and why it is essential for our health, wealth and happiness Graeme Garrard (2022)
The Project State and its rivals Charles Maier (2023)
The Battle for Britain – crises, conflicts and the conjuncture J Clarke (2023)
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