Preston, N: Encouraging Ethics and Challenging Corruption: Law, Ethics & Public Affairs
Autor Noel Preston, Professor Charles Sampford, Carmel Connorsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 aug 2002
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781862874480
ISBN-10: 1862874484
Pagini: 224
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Federation Press
Seria Law, Ethics & Public Affairs
ISBN-10: 1862874484
Pagini: 224
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Federation Press
Seria Law, Ethics & Public Affairs
Cuprins
Contents Part A: A Framework for Public Sector Ethics Public Sector Ethics in a Contemporary Context Towards a Theory for Public Ethics Institutionalising Ethics Part B: The Individual Public Official The Vocation of Public Life Managing Conflict of Interest and Making Decisions Part C: The Queensland Experience of Reform From Fitzgerald to Shepherdson: A Brief History The Queensland Reforms: An Assessment Epilogue Towards Best Practice: Ethics Centred Governance Reform Bibliography/ Index
Recenzii
Two of Australia’s leading practical ethicists, … drawing on a decade of personal experience in researching, assisting and advising the Queensland Government on initiatives to encourage ethics and prevent corruption, set forth their blueprint for a best practice integrity system or “ethics regimeâ€. The book is divided into three parts: a theoretical and conceptual framework for an ethics regime; an examination of the place of the individual within a world of institutional ethics; and an outline of the Queensland governance reforms following the Fitzgerald Inquiry. This is essential reading for anyone concerned about integrity and ethics in any institution, private or public. National Institute for Governance Newsletter, No 2(4), May 2003 A welcome addition to the Australian literature … brings together a critical history of the post-Fitzgerald reforms to Queensland governance with a more general analysis of design principles relevant to public-sector ethics. The account of Queensland is used as something of a test case … The theme is that ethics can and should be made the heart of governance reform, if the reforming elite has the will to extend public accountability to cover compliance with legitimate democratic values. … The argument in support of this case is … something called ‘institutional ethics’ [which] is contrasted with ‘individual ethics’ … The challenge then becomes how to institutionalise character. The merit of an institutionalised approach is that it sees the problem in systemic terms with individuals repsonding to institutional cues about what is proper according to public-sector context rather than simply their private conscience. … Codes of conduct emerge as favoured institutions but the book has no hard evidence on the power of codes to institutionalise official conduct. The final chapter sensibly favours as many checks and balances as one can imagine, again placing ‘virtue’ in a solid institutional setting. … John Uhr, Australian Journal of Political Science, Vol 38(3), November 2003