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Classical liberalism entails not only a theory about the scope of government and its relationship with the market but also a distinct view about how government should operate within its proper domain of public choices in non-market settings. Building on the political economy principles underpinning the works of diverse authors such as Friedrich Hayek, James Buchanan and Vincent and Elinor Ostrom, this book challenges the technocratic-epistocratic perspective in which social goals are defined by an aggregated social function and experts simply provide the means to attain them. The authors argue that individualism, freedom of choice, and freedom of association have deep implications on how we design, manage and assess our public governance arrangements. The book examines the knowledge and incentive problems associated with bureaucratic public administration while contrasting it with democratic governance. Aligica, Boettke, and Tarko argue that the focus should be on the diversity of opinions in any society regarding "what should be done" and on the design of democratic and polycentric institutions capable of limiting social conflicts and satisfying the preferences of as many people as possible. They thus fill a large gap in the literature, the public discourse, and the ways decision makers understand the nature and administration of the public sector.
Paul Dragos Aligica is Senior Research Fellow at the F. A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at Mercatus Center at George Mason University and Professor of Administrative Sciences at the University of Bucharest. Peter J. Boettke is Professor of Economics and Philosophy at George Mason University and the Director of the F.A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at the Mercatus Center. Vlad Tarko is Assistant Professor of Economics at Dickinson College
Introduction Acknowledgments Part I: A Distinctive Perspective on Governance: The Building Blocks Chapter 1: Classical Liberalism: Delineating Its Theory of Governance Chapter 2: Function, Structure, and Process at the Private-Public Interface Chapter 3: Dynamic Governance: The Polycentrism Process and Knowledge Processes Part II: Public Choice and Public Administration: The Confluence Chapter 4: Public Administration and Public Choice: Charting the Field Chapter 5: Public Choice, Public Administration, and Self-Governance: The Ostromian Confluence Chapter 6: Heterogeneity, Coproduction, and Polycentric Governance: The Ostroms' Public Choice Institutionalism Revisited Part III: Framing the Applied Level: Themes, Issue Areas, and Cases Chapter 7: Metropolitan Governance: Polycentric Solutions for Complex Problems Chapter 8: Independent Regulatory Agencies and Their Reform: An Exercise in Institutional Imagination Chapter 9: Polycentric Stakeholder Analysis: Corporate Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility Conclusions: Governance and Public Management: A Vindication of the Classical-Liberal Perspective?