| Acknowledgments | |
| Introduction | |
| Purposes | |
| Sources and Methods | |
| Tests | |
| Managerial Imagination | |
| The Town Librarian and the Latchkey Children | |
| Public Managers and Public Management | |
| An Alternative Approach to Public Administration | |
| Envisioning Public Value | |
| Defining Public Value | |
| The Aim of Managerial Work | |
| Different Standards for Reckoning Public Value | |
| Municipal Sanitation: An Example | |
| Toward a Managerial View of Public Value | |
| Organizational Strategy in the Public Sector | |
| William Ruckeishaus and the Environmental Protection Agency | |
| Jerome Miller and the Department of Youth Services | |
| Managerial Discretion and Leadership in the Public Sector | |
| Defining Mission and Goals in the Private Sector | |
| Defining Mission and Goals in the Public Sector | |
| The Mission of the EPA: Pollution Abatement | |
| The Mission of DYS: Humanizing the Treatment of Children | |
| The Managerial Utility of Mission Statements | |
| Evaluative Criteria for Organizational Strategies | |
| Building Support and Legitimacy | |
| Mobilizing Support, Legitimacy, and Coproduction: The Functions of Political Management | |
| Miles Mahoney and Park Plaza | |
| David Sencer and the Threat of Swine flu | |
| Political Management: A Key Managerial Function | |
| Who Is Important in Political Management | |
| Combining Diverse Interests and Values | |
| The Dynamics of the Authorizing Environment | |
| The Challenge of Political Management | |
| Advocacy, Negotiation, and Leadership: The Techniques of Political Management | |
| Mahoney's Initiatives | |
| Sencer's Initiatives | |
| Evaluation | |
| The Ethics and Techniques of Political Management | |
| Entrepreneurial Advocacy | |
| Managing Policy Development | |
| Negotiation | |
| Public Deliberation, Social Learning, and Leadership | |
| Public Sector Marketing and Strategic Communication | |
| Helping to Define and Produce Public Value | |
| Delivering Public Value | |
| Reengineering Public Sector Production: The Function of Operational Management | |
| Harry Spence and the Boston Housing Authority | |
| Lee Brown and the Houston Police Department | |
| The Function of Operational Management | |
| Defining Organizational Mission and Product | |
| Redesigning Production Processes | |
| Using Administrative Systems to Influence Operations | |
| Innovating and Capitalizing | |
| From Diagnosis to Intervention | |
| Implementing Strategy: The Techniques of Operational Management | |
| Spence: Rehabilitating Public Housing in Boston | |
| Brown: Exploring the Frontiers of Policing | |
| Reengineering Organizations: What Strategic Managers Think and Do | |
| Acting in a Stream | |
| Conclusion: Acting for a Divided, Uncertain Society | |
| Ethical Challenges of Public Leadership | |
| Psychological Challenges of Public Leadership | |
| Notes | |
| Index | |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |