Leading Local Government : The Role of Directly Elected Mayors /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Fenwick, John, author.
Imprint:Bingley : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2020.
Description:1 online resource (158 pages)
Language:English
Series:Emerald Points
Emerald points.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13361561
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Johnston, Lorraine, author.
ISBN:1839096527
9781839096501
1839096500
9781839096525
1839096535
9781839096532
Notes:Description based upon print version of record.
Summary:Leading Local Government: The Role of Directly Elected Mayors provides a critical assessment of the role occupied by directly elected mayors in the leadership of English local government. Built on original research and historical analysis, the book examines the impact of elected mayors upon public engagement, devolution and local leadership.
Other form:Print version: Fenwick, John Leading Local Government : The Role of Directly Elected Mayors Bingley : Emerald Publishing Limited,c2020 9781839096532
Description
Summary:Leading Local Government: The Role of Directly Elected Mayors is a timely and critical book that examines the erratic rise and uncertain future of the directly elected mayor in the context of English local governance. <br> Written principally for local government practitioners as well as for those with an academic interest in public leadership, the book asks whether elected mayors offer a new and reinvigorated form of local leadership, whether for individual towns and cities or for wider groups of combined authorities at the regional level. Built on original primary research conducted with mayors, elected representatives and a range of public sector managers, the book offers a fresh perspective that recognises mayoral achievements in some areas - including economic development - but finds that mayors do not enjoy widespread public endorsement and do not represent devolution of power in any meaningful sense. Above all, the book argues that elected mayors do not represent democratic renewal in a country which remains highly centralized. Using an historical account of early local government leaders together with international comparisons from the United States and Europe, the authors present the argument that, twenty years into the mayoral experiment, the mayoral initiative has so far failed to match the aspirations of central government for a new and effective form of local leadership.
Item Description:Description based upon print version of record.
Physical Description:1 online resource (158 pages)
ISBN:1839096527
9781839096501
1839096500
9781839096525
1839096535
9781839096532