Open Access

Shared services – shared necessity: Austerity, reformed local government and reduced budgets1

   | Dec 30, 2015

Cite

Audit Scotland. (2013). Improving community planning in Scotland. Edinburgh: Audit Scotland.Search in Google Scholar

Bevir, M. (2010). Democratic governance. Oxford: Princeton University Press.10.1515/9781400836857Search in Google Scholar

Bevir, M. (2011). Democratic governance: A genealogy. Local Government Studies, 37 (1), 3–17.10.1080/03003930.2011.539860Search in Google Scholar

Blyth, M. (2013) Austerity. The history of a dangerous idea. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Search in Google Scholar

Christie, C. (2011). Commission on the future delivery of public services. Edinburgh: HMSO.Search in Google Scholar

Cockett, R. (1995). Thinking the unthinkable: Think-tanks and the economic counter-revolution 1931–1983. London: Harper Collins.Search in Google Scholar

Cooke, P., & Morgan, K. (1998). The associational economy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198290186.001.0001Search in Google Scholar

Fine, B., & Milonakis, D. (2008). From political economy to economics: Method, the social and the historical in the evolution of economic theory. London: Routledge.Search in Google Scholar

Hood, C. (1995). The ‘new public management’ in the 1980s. Variations on a theme. Accounting, Organisation & Society, 20 (2/3), 93–109.10.1016/0361-3682(93)E0001-WSearch in Google Scholar

Hoyt, L. (2005). Planning through compulsory commercial clubs: Business improvement districts. Economic Affairs, 25 (4), 24–7.10.1111/j.1468-0270.2005.00585.xSearch in Google Scholar

Hutton, W. (2015). How good we can be. Ending the mercenary society and building a great country. London: Little Brown.Search in Google Scholar

Jones, R., Goodwin, M., Jones, M., & Pett, K. (2005). ‘Filling in’ the state: Economic governance and the evolution of devolution in Wales. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 23, 337–60.10.1068/c39mSearch in Google Scholar

Judt, T. (2010). Ill fares the land: A treatise on our present discontents. London: Penguin.Search in Google Scholar

Klein, N. (2007). The shock doctrine: The rise of disaster capitalism. London: Penguin.Search in Google Scholar

Lloyd, M. G., & Peel, D. (2007). Community planning and land use planning in Scotland: A constructive interface? Public Policy and Administration, 22, 353–66.10.1177/0952076707078765Search in Google Scholar

Lloyd, M. G., & Peel, D. (2008). From town centre management to the business improvement district model in Britain: Towards a new contractualism? In G. Morçöl, L. Hoyt, J. Meek & U. Zimmermann (Eds), Business improvement districts: Research, theories, and controversies (pp. 71–94). New York: Taylor and Francis.Search in Google Scholar

Lloyd, M. G., & Peel, D. (2012). Soft contractualism? Facilitating institutional change in planning and development relations in Scotland. Urban Research and Practice, 5 (2), 239–55.10.1080/17535069.2012.691620Search in Google Scholar

Marquand, D. (2004). Decline of the public: The hollowing out of citizenship. Cambridge: Polity Press.Search in Google Scholar

Marquand, D. (2014). Mammon’s kingdom: An essay on Britain, now. London: Allen Lane.Search in Google Scholar

Milne, S. (2012). The revenge of history: The battle for the twenty-first century. London: Verso.Search in Google Scholar

Mirowski, P. (2013). Never let a serious crisis go to waste. London: Verso.Search in Google Scholar

New Economics Foundation. (2014). Commissioning for outcomes and co-production. A practical guide for local authorities. London: New Economics Foundation.Search in Google Scholar

Northern Ireland Environmental Link. (2006). Introducing community planning to Northern Ireland. Belfast: Northern Ireland Environmental Link.Search in Google Scholar

Nutt, D. (2015). How to privatise the high street. The expansion of property owner bids. London: Centre for Policy Studies.Search in Google Scholar

Osborne, S. P. (2006). The new public governance? Public Management Review, 8 (3), 377–87.10.1080/14719030600853022Search in Google Scholar

Peel, D., & Lloyd, M. G. (2007). Neo-traditional planning. Towards a new ethos for land use planning? Land Use Policy, 24 (2), 396–403.Search in Google Scholar

Peel, D., & Lloyd, M. G. (2012). The Edinburgh concordat: Contractual, collaborative positive planning? Public Performance & Management Review, 36 (2), 275–89.10.2753/PMR1530-9576360206Search in Google Scholar

Peel, D., O’Keeffe, B., Shi, L., Leith, K., & Keaveney, K. (2011). Shared services across local government. Sharing international experiences. Armagh: International Centre for Local and Regional Development.Search in Google Scholar

Pemberton, S., Peel, D., & Lloyd, M. G. (2014). The filling in of community-based policy and planning in the devolved UK? The Geographical Journal, 181 (1), 6–15.10.1111/geoj.12075Search in Google Scholar

Policy Exchange. (2013). Park land. How open data can improve our urban green spaces. London: Policy Exchange.Search in Google Scholar

Policy Exchange. (2014). Green society. Policies to improve the UK’s urban green spaces. London: Policy Exchange.Search in Google Scholar

Sandel, M. (2012). What money can’t buy. The moral limits of markets. London: Allen Lane.Search in Google Scholar

Schulz, V., & Brenner, W. (2010). Characteristics of shared service centers. Transforming government: People, process and policy, 4 (3), 210–19.10.1108/17506161011065190Search in Google Scholar

Scottish Government. (2012). Shared services. Retrieved from http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Government/PublicServiceReform/efficientgovernment/SharedServices [16 December 2015].Search in Google Scholar

Scottish Government. (2013). Written evidence submitted by the Scottish Government (CSR 32). London: HMSO.Search in Google Scholar

Scottish Government. (2015). Joint housing delivery plan for Scotland. Edinburgh: Scottish Government.Search in Google Scholar

Webster, C. (2005). Diversifying the institutions of local planning. Economic Affairs, 25 (4), 4–10.10.1111/j.1468-0270.2005.00581.xSearch in Google Scholar