Lexington Books
Pages: 122
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-4544-9 • Hardback • May 2011 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-0-7391-4546-3 • eBook • May 2011 • $99.50 • (£77.00)
Cal Clark is professor of political science and the director of the MPA Program at Auburn University. Don-Terry Veal is director of Auburn University's Center for Governmental Services.
1 Introduction
2 Advancing Excellence and Public Trust in Government
3 Part I: The Challenge
4 Chapter 1: The Challenge of Resurrecting the Public Trust
5 Chapter 2: Serving the Public to Restore the Public Trust
6 Part II: Promoting Transparency
7 Chapter 3: Promoting Transparency in Local Governments
8 Chapter 4: Bringing Transparency to Public Budgeting
9 Chapter 5: Using the Internet to Create Transparency in State Budgets
10 Chapter 6: Transparency in the Contracting Process
11 Chapter 7: Higher Education as Transparency Challenged
12 Chapter 8: Transparency and Cleaning Up Local Governments
13 Chapter 9:Measuring Government Performance and Officials' Qualifications
14 Chapter 10: A "Bottoms Up" Approach to State Transparency
15 Chapter 11: Issues in Transparency and Restoring the Public Trust
16 Part III: Performance Measures and Reform
17 Chapter 12: Measuring Government Performance to Promote Transparency
18 Chapter 13: Transparency and Measuring What Governments Do
19 Chapter 14: Targeted Transparency
20 David Weil
21 Chapter 15: Transparency in the Broader Context of Governance and Civic Engagement
22 Part IV: Transforming General Governance
23 Chapter 16: Making a Difference in People's Lives to Regain the Public Trust
24 Chapter 17: The Need to Establish the Purpose of Government
25 Paula Gordon
26 Chapter 18: Civic Engagement and Transparency for Regaining the Public Trust
27 Contributors
Advancing Excellence and Public Trust in Government provides an excellent discussion of the major issues involved in the debate about transparency in government. It provides a sophisticated discussion of efforts to improve governmental transparency with a special emphasis on budgets and performance measures and covers a wide range of topics, presenting contrasting perspectives on transparency. This book is an outstanding contribution to academic scholarship. The issue of transparency is under represented in the current literature and this book covers valuable issues relating to transparency in government.
— John Sibley Butler, University of Texas at Austin
Readers looking for solutions to the lack of trust in government will find guidance in this slim volume. The essays consider the promises and pitfalls with increasing governmental transparency at all levels.
— Dave Rausch, Teel Bivins Professor of Political Science, West Texas A&M University