Title
Institutional memory as storytelling : how networked government remembers / Jack Corbett, Dennis C. Grube, Heather Lovell, Rodney James Scott.
ISBN
9781108780001 (ebook)
9781108748001 (paperback)
Publication
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Physical Description
1 online resource (68 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 08 Jan 2021).
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
How do bureaucracies remember? The conventional view is that institutional memory is static and singular, the sum of recorded files and learned procedures. There is a growing body of scholarship that suggests contemporary bureaucracies are failing at this core task. This Element argues that this diagnosis misses that memories are essentially dynamic stories. They reside with people and are thus dispersed across the array of actors that make up the differentiated polity. Drawing on four policy examples from four sectors (housing, energy, family violence and justice) in three countries (the UK, Australia and New Zealand), this Element argues that treating the way institutions remember as storytelling is both empirically salient and normatively desirable. It is concluded that the current conceptualisation of institutional memory needs to be recalibrated to fit the types of policy learning practices required by modern collaborative governance.
Variant and related titles
Cambridge core frontlist 2020.
Other formats
Print version:
Added to Catalog
January 27, 2021
Series
Cambridge elements. Elements in public and nonprofit administration,