Redesigning the Work of Human Services

Redesigning the Work of Human Services

Author: John O'Looney

Publisher: Praeger

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 352

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Redesigning the Work of Human Services explores alternative organizational designs for the delivery of human services—designs that emphasize collaborative governance and partnerships among public and private agencies, local control and responsibility for results, and the use of innovative information, planning, and community capacity-building technologies. This book redefines the debate about whether human services should be privatized or not. The author suggests that the basic task of human services—to enable families to socialize the young—is one that can neither be fulfilled effectively by the state nor by private agencies. Rather, carefully crafted public-private partnerships, when combined with new accountability mechanisms and the sophisticated use of emerging information technologies, are likely to offer more in the way of effective, efficient, and appropriate human services. Because this work is solidly grounded in the literature on both human and business services, the author's suggestions for major redesign are comprehensive and intelligently qualified.


ASPER Research and Evaluation Projects 1970-79

ASPER Research and Evaluation Projects 1970-79

Author: United States. Department of Labor. Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Evaluation, and Research

Publisher:

Published: 1980

Total Pages: 128

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Annotated bibliography of evaluation and research reports emanating from the USA department of labor (asper) on the labour market, economic policy, employment and vocational training programmes for the period from 1970 to 1979.


Research in Urban Economics

Research in Urban Economics

Author: Committee on Urban Public Economics

Publisher: JAI Press(NY)

Published: 1983

Total Pages: 328

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Proceedings of two conferences of the Committee on Urban Public Economics (COUPE).


Government Reports Annual Index

Government Reports Annual Index

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1977

Total Pages: 874

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Sections 1-2. Keyword Index.--Section 3. Personal author index.--Section 4. Corporate author index.-- Section 5. Contract/grant number index, NTIS order/report number index 1-E.--Section 6. NTIS order/report number index F-Z.


Issues in Urban Economics

Issues in Urban Economics

Author: Harvey S. Perloff

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-10-18

Total Pages: 614

ISBN-13: 1134001215

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Classic economic considerations applied to the crucial urban problems of poverty, racial segregation, urban renewal, transportation, and education. Originally published in 1968


Evaluating Welfare and Training Programs

Evaluating Welfare and Training Programs

Author: Charles F. Manski

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 1992

Total Pages: 384

ISBN-13: 9780674270176

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Almost everyone would like to see the enactment of sound, practical measures to help disadvantaged people get off welfare and find jobs at decent wages, and over the past quarter-century federal and state governments have struggled to develop just such programs. How do we know whether they are having the hoped-for effect? How do we know whether these vast outlays of money are helping the people they are designed to reach? All welfare and training programs have been subject to professional evaluations, including social experiments and demonstrations designed to test new ideas. This book reviews what we have discovered from past assessments and suggests how welfare and training programs should be planned for the 1990s. The authors of this volume, each a recognized expert in the evaluation of social programs, do more than summarize what we have learned so far. They clarify why the issue of the proper conduct and interpretation of evaluations has itself been a subject of continuing controversy. In part, the problem is organizational, requiring the integrated efforts of social scientists, public officials, and the professionals who execute evaluations. In addition, there is a dispute about scientific method: should evaluators try to understand the complex social processes that make programs succeed (or fail), or should they focus on inputs and outputs, treating the programs themselves as "black boxes" whose machinery remains hidden? Evaluating Welfare and Training Programs will be important for policy researchers and evaluation professionals, social scientists concerned with evaluation methods, public officials working in social policy, and students of public policy, economics, and social work.