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Public Budgeting in Search for an Identity: State of the Art and Future Challenges provides a state-of-the-art reflection on current trends in international public budgeting, representing an important pillar in the accumulation of knowledge on public sector budgeting processes, contents, evolutions and critical issues.

Budgeting is central in public sector organizations. It performs a complex variety of functions, being the arena where multiple actors, cultures and professional identities interact, making it an extremely fascinating field and topic of investigation. There is a significant need and scope for exploring budgeting processes in the public sector today, as a consequence of the managerial waves of reforms that have taken place over the last few decades and the implementation of austerity programmes – as well as in light of current trends, including emerging challenges related to community care and wellbeing, rising inequality, people flows, climate change, pandemics, and the persistence of democratic deficits. The chapters in this volume address critical issues on this broad topic, offering new perspectives on current evolutions in public budgeting, including, among others, participatory budgeting, performance budgeting, the budgetary slack resources and the need to ensure balance between budget control and flexibility. These contributions show that public budgeting can, and must remain, the subject of enduring interest in our studies.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Public Management Review.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Table of Contents
  6. Citation Information
  7. Notes on Contributors
  8. Introduction: Public budgeting in search for an identity: state of the art and future challenges
  9. 1 Insights into performance-based budgeting in the public sector: a literature review and a research agenda
  10. 2 Linking budgeting to results? Evidence about performance budgets in European municipalities based on a comparative analytical model
  11. 3 The design of performance budgeting processes and managerial accountability relationships
  12. 4 Balancing budget control and flexibility: the central finance agency as ‘responsive regulator’
  13. 5 Fiscal slack, budget shocks, and performance in public organizations: evidence from public schools
  14. 6 Democracy, governmentality and transparency: participatory budgeting in action
  15. 7 Budgeting and the construction of entities: struggles to negotiate change in Swedish municipalities
  16. Index
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