The Reform of Public Services Under New Labour
Narratives of Consumerism
1 edition
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Word Count
64,000 words, Guess
Page Count
256 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Internet Archivereformpublicserv00need_337
- Internet Archivereformpublicserv00need_628
- ISBN-101403995311
- ISBN-139781403995315
- Library of Congress Control Number2007018271
and 4 more
- OCLC Control Number124161757
- Better World Books9781403995315
- Better World BooksKL-511-210
- Open LibraryOL11643108M
Classifications
- LCCJA1-92JN101-JN1371JF
- LCCHV248 .N284 2007
Description
At the doctor's surgery, the local school, the JobCentre Plus, public service users share a desire for prompt, polite and responsive treatment. They want services that meet their individual needs and allow them to feel engaged in the process. These common and seemingly non-contentious expectations are at the centre of controversy over New Labour's public service reforms in the UK. Such attitudes are linked to consumerism in public services - a force that can, according to rival interpretations, drive up service standards or corrode the collective status underlying citizenship. The book shows how New Labour has drawn on different narratives of consumerism during a decade in office. Using content analysis of government documents and interviews with policy actors and citizens, it moves beyond accounts that assume New Labour's consumerism has applied evenly to public services and over time. The book concludes with a call to transcend consumerism and encourage approaches that recognise the service user as a ₁coproducer₂.
Subjects
Topics
Other Editions
- The Reform of Public Services Under New Labour: Narratives of Consumerism
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