Governance, Performance, and Capacity Stress
The Chronic Case of Prison Crowding
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Palgrave Macmillan
Published:28th Jul '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Public policy systems often sustain chronic capacity stress (CCS) meaning they neither excel nor fail in what they do, but do both in ways that are somehow manageable and acceptable. This book is about one archetypal case of CCS – crowding in the British prison system – and how we need a more integrated theoretical understanding of its complexity.
"A fascinating and well informed analysis of how Government deals with prison overcrowding, one of their most wicked and insoluble problems. A problem that combines real operational risk, substantial cost with complex politics as a result of unresolved conflicts between punishment and rehabilitation."
Phil Wheatley, Former Head of HM Prison Service and the National Offender Management Service
"Simon Bastow's book is an impressive and systematic effort to describe the development of the policies which have created the UK's prison system. This important part of our national life is insufficiently analyzed and gets too little policy and political attention. This book is an excellent effort to fill that gap and deserves to be widely read."
Charles Clarke, Former Labour Home Secretary
"Why do policy systems display grinding underperformance despite sustained reform efforts? Showing the limitations of traditional approaches, Bastow introduces a holistic approach that helps us understand what he calls 'chronic capacity stress'. Writing with ease, his analysis of the UK prison system demonstrates the analytical potential of this fresh approach"
Arjen Boin, School of Governance, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
ISBN: 9781137289155
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 4728g
278 pages