Offers a comprehensive study of the development of the central institution of government over the first century of its life. Based on the author's research and 30 years' experience writing about central government in Australia, this book provides an understanding of both the history and the working of the institution
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The Private Government of Public Money, published by Hugh Heclo and Aaron Wildavsky, was a study of the working of the Treasury in Britain. Even if some of the detail is now dated, their bold and innovative approach, portraying Whitehall as a community, was an antidote to the rather formal descriptions that had been the standard early accounts. This article examines the approach they took, assesses its impact on future studies and asks whether they were pioneering the route for future interpretivist studies. It concluded that even if neither of the authors would have been comfortable to be categorised in those terms, they did open up the study of government in a way that has encouraged and enabled later interpretevist research.
Prime ministers often have to work with prime ministerial aspirants, senior ministers who regard themselves as possible successors. But can these challengers seize the job when the prime ministers are reluctant to stand down? Using evidence from Canada, Britain and Australia, the article explores the conditions in which successions have taken place and the capacity of the prime ministerial aspirants to expedite the process. It identifies three alternative strategies that are shaped by the party rules in the different countries. The aspirants may flee, fight or fulminate. Which strategy will best improve their chances of winning the top job depends on the traditional or developing modes of leadership election that their parties have adopted. Some processes provide the means to assassinate the leader. Others have no opportunity to act; rivals can do nothing but wait, either in or outside parliament. The article finds that the broader the constituency that elects the leaders, the more secure those leaders are when their reputation declines.