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A chequered history but positive future for British public administration

A chequered history but positive future for British public administration
A chequered history but positive future for British public administration
Public services, public servants, and the study of Public Administration are operating in a context of global turbulence. Our review of the state of the discipline suggests that a core strength of British Public Administration has been the complementarity between scholarship and practice, responding to existential threats. We analyse changing relationships between the discipline and practice in British public administration over three eras: applied; fragmented; and impactful. The applied era saw mutual exchange, but a lack of criticality. The fragmented era was one of a retreat to over-specialisation and identity crises. The impactful era has tried to revivify synergies but has struggled
for coherence and criticality. Looking to the future, the nascent sub-field of Positive Public Administration is identified as providing an opportunity to radically redefine the scientific quality and social relevance of the discipline due to the way it blends constructive engagement with independent criticality.
British public administration, history of public administration, positive public administration
0033-3352
Elliott, Ian C.
5a2cd70c-c7ff-4e57-b943-4e14b6796880
Richardson, Liz
c4e98c2a-9051-43f3-be61-542e4df98dc1
Durose, Catherine
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Ayres, Sarah
ece5d8f5-687c-4d3e-9dde-35f9befbf429
Boswell, John
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Cairney, Paul
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Flinders, Matthew
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Martin, Steve
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Elliott, Ian C.
5a2cd70c-c7ff-4e57-b943-4e14b6796880
Richardson, Liz
c4e98c2a-9051-43f3-be61-542e4df98dc1
Durose, Catherine
9773692b-b486-404a-8c68-53652a252e31
Ayres, Sarah
ece5d8f5-687c-4d3e-9dde-35f9befbf429
Boswell, John
34bad0df-3d4d-40ce-948f-65871e3d783c
Cairney, Paul
5c10a3bb-d0b2-4179-ae93-0c64a0099c81
Flinders, Matthew
d4982871-f267-4c51-a12b-1e0340ed4465
Martin, Steve
9f902d9c-eb32-410b-a1ff-f8ae3c2a9ff7

Elliott, Ian C., Richardson, Liz, Durose, Catherine, Ayres, Sarah, Boswell, John, Cairney, Paul, Flinders, Matthew and Martin, Steve (2026) A chequered history but positive future for British public administration. Public Administration Review. (doi:10.1111/puar.70094).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Public services, public servants, and the study of Public Administration are operating in a context of global turbulence. Our review of the state of the discipline suggests that a core strength of British Public Administration has been the complementarity between scholarship and practice, responding to existential threats. We analyse changing relationships between the discipline and practice in British public administration over three eras: applied; fragmented; and impactful. The applied era saw mutual exchange, but a lack of criticality. The fragmented era was one of a retreat to over-specialisation and identity crises. The impactful era has tried to revivify synergies but has struggled
for coherence and criticality. Looking to the future, the nascent sub-field of Positive Public Administration is identified as providing an opportunity to radically redefine the scientific quality and social relevance of the discipline due to the way it blends constructive engagement with independent criticality.

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Accepted/In Press date: 30 January 2025
Published date: 12 February 2026
Keywords: British public administration, history of public administration, positive public administration

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509805
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509805
ISSN: 0033-3352
PURE UUID: 851a2e96-1835-4a1f-93bd-d98a9762b6b5
ORCID for John Boswell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3018-8791

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Mar 2026 23:13
Last modified: 06 Mar 2026 03:00

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Contributors

Author: Ian C. Elliott
Author: Liz Richardson
Author: Catherine Durose
Author: Sarah Ayres
Author: John Boswell ORCID iD
Author: Paul Cairney
Author: Matthew Flinders
Author: Steve Martin

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