Reference

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参考文献 Reference List
1-2. From Educational Management to Educational Governance:
Practical and Theoretical Enquiries
(a) A Historical-Comparative Enquiry
1. Rhodes, R.A.W. (1997). Understanding Governance: Policy Network,
Governance, Reflexivity and Accountability. Buckingham: Open
University Press.
2. Rhodes, R.A.W. (2011). “The Governance Narratives: Key Findings
and Lessons from the ESRC’s Whitehall Program” Pp. 41-58. In
R.A.W. Rhodes (Eds.) Public Administration: 25 Years of Analysis
and Debates. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
3. *Rhodes, R.A.W. (2012). “Waves of Governance.” Pp.33-48. In D.
Levi-Faur (Ed.) Oxford Handbook of Governance. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.Bevir, Mark (2012). Governance: A Very Short
Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
4. Bevir, Mark (2010). Democratic Governance. Princeton: Princeton
University Press.
5. Beriv, Mark and R.A.W. Rhodes (2003a) “Searching for Civil Society:
Changing Patterns of Governance in Britain.” Public Administration,
Vol. 81, No. 1, Pp. 41-63. (Special issue on Governance)
6. Beriv, Mark and R.A.W. Rhodes (2006). Governance Stories. London:
Routledge.
7. Richards, David and M.J. Smith (2002). Governance and Public Policy
in the United Kingdom. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Kettl,
Donald F. (2002). The Transformation of Governance: Public
Administration for the Twenty-First Century. Baltimore: The Johns
Hopkins University.
8. Lane, Jan-Erik (1997). Public Sector Reform: Rationale, Trends and
Problems. London: Sage.
9. Levi-Faur, David (2012) “From ‘Big Government’ to ‘Big Governance’?”
In D. Levi-Faur (Ed.) Oxford Handbook of Governance. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
10. Jordana, Jacint and D. Levi-Faur (2004) “The Politics of Regulation in
the Age of Governance.” Pp. 1-28. In J. Jordana and D. Levi-Faur
(Eds.) The Politics of Regulations: Institutions and Regulatory
Reforms for the Age of Governance. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
11. Lynn, Laurence E. Jr. (2006). Public Management: Old and New. New
York: Routledge.
12. Marsh, David (1998) “The development of the Policy Network
Approach.”Pp. 3-17. In D. Marsh (Ed.) Comparing Policy Networks.
Buckingham: Open University Press.
1
13. Marsh, David and M. Smith (2000). “Understanding Policy Networks:
Towards a Dialectical Approach.” Political Studies, Vol. 48, No. Pp.
4-21.
14. Mayntz, Renate (2003). “New Challenges to Governance Theory.” Pp.
27-40. H.P. Bang (Ed.) Governance as Social Communication.
Manchester: Manchester University Press.
15. Maytz, Renate (1993). “Governing Failures an the Problem of
Governability: Some Comments on a Theoretical Paradigm.” Pp.
9-20. In J. Kooiman (Ed.) Modern Governance: New
Government-Society Interactions. London: Sage Publications.
16. *Sørnsen, Eva and J. Torfing (2007). “Introduction: Governance
Network Research: Towards a Second Generation.” Pp. 1-21; and
In E. Sørensen & J. Torfing (Eds.) Theories of Democratic Network
Governance. Houndmill: Palgrave Macmillian.
17. Kickert, Walter J.M., E-H Klijin and J.F.M. Koppenjan (1997) (Eds.)
Managing Complex Networks: Strategies for the Public Sector.
London: Sage.
18. Schneider, Volker (2012). “Governance and Complexity.” Pp. 129-142.
In D. Levi-Faur (Ed.) Oxford Handbook of Governance. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.Bevir, Mark (2012). Governance: A Very
Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
19. Denhardt, Janet V. and R. B. Denhardt (2015). The New Public
Service: Serving, not Steering. New York: Routledge.
20. Hood, Christopher and R. Dixon. (2015) A Government that Worked
Better and Cost Less: Evaluating Three Decades of Reform and
Change in UK Central Government. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
21. Osborne, Stephen P. (2010). Introduction: The (New) “Public
Governance: A Suitable Case for Treatment?” Pp.1-15. In S.P.
Osborne (Ed.) The New Public Governance? Emerging Perspective
on the Theory and Practice of Public Governance. London:
Routledge.
22. Jessop, Bob (1999) “The Changing Governance of Welfare: Recent
Trends in its Primary Functions, Scale and Models of Coordination.”
Social Policy and Administration 33 (4), Pp. 348-359.
23. Jessop, Bob (2011). “Metagocernance.” Pp. 106-123. In M. Beriv (Ed.)
The Sage Handbook of Governance. London: Sage.
24. Peter, B. Guy (2010). “Meta-Governance and Public Administration.”
Pp. 36-51. In S.P. Osborne (Ed.) The New Public Governance?
Emerging Perspective on the Theory and Practice of Public
Governance. London: Routledge.
25. Meuleman, Louis (2008). Public management and the
2
Metagovernance of Hierarchies, Networks and Markets: The
Feasibility of Designing and managing Governance Style
Combination. Heidelberg : Physica-Verlag.
26. Sørensen, Eva & J. Torfing (2007). “Theoretical Approaches on
Metagovernance.” Pp. 169-182. In E. Sørensen & J. Torfing (Eds.)
Theories of Democratic Network Governance. Houndmill: Palgrave
Macmillian.
27. Kooiman, Jan (2000). “Societal Governance: Levels, Modes and
Orders of Social-Political Interaction.” Pp. 138-164. In J. Pierre (Ed.)
Debating Governance. Oxford: Oxford University Press. .
28. Kooiman, Jan (2003). Governing as Governance. London: Sage.
29. Kooiman, Jan (2010). “Governance and Governability.” Pp. 72-86. In
S.P. Osborne (Ed.) The New Public Governance? Emerging
Perspective on the Theory and Practice of Public Governance.
London: Routledge.
30. Ostrom, Elinor (1990.) Governing the Commons: The Evolution of
Institutions for Collective Action. New York: Cambridge University
Press.
31. Ostrom, Elinor (2005). Understanding Institutional Diversity. Princeton:
Princeton University Press.
32. *Ostrom, Elinor (2014/2010). “Beyond Markets and States: Polycentric
Governance of Complex Economic Systems.” Pp. 167-209. E.
Ostrom & V. Ostrom (Eds.) Choice, Rules and Collective Action:
The Ostrom on the Study of Institutions and Governance.
Colchester : ECPR Press.
33. Ostrom, Vincent & E. Ostrom (2014/1971) “Public Choice: A Different
Approach to the Study of Public Administration.” Pp. 23-43. In E.
Ostrom & V. Ostrom (Eds.) Choice, Rules and Collective Action:
The Ostrom on the Study of Institutions and Governance.
Colchester : ECPR Press.
34. OECD (2015). Building the Basics. Value for Money in Government
Series. Paris: OECD Publishing.
35. Kaufmann, Daniel, et al. (1999). Governance Matters. Policy
Research Working Paper No. 2196. Washington DC: The World
Bank.
36. Kaufmann, Daniel, et al. (2009). Governance Matters. Policy
Research Working Paper No. 4978. Washington DC: The World
Bank.
37. Rothstein, Bo (2012). “Good Governance. Pp. 143-154. In D.
Levi-Faur (Ed.) Oxford Handbook of Governance. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.Bevir, Mark (2012). Governance: A Very Short
Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
3
(b) A Theoretical Enquiry
1. *Allison, Derek J. (2015). “Toward the Fifth Age: The Continuing
Evolution of Academic Educational Administration”. In D. Burgess
and P. Newton (Eds.) Educational administration and leadership:
theoretical foundations. New York: Routledge.
2. Culbertson, J. (1988) "A Century's Quest for a Knowledge Base." Pp.
3-26 in N. Boyan (Ed.) Handbook of Research on Educational
Administration. New York: Longman.
3. Donmoyer, R. (1999) "The Continuing Quest for a Knowledge Base:
1976-1998." Pp. 25-44 in in J. Murphy, and K.S. Louis (Eds.)
Handbook of Research on Educational Administration, 2nd ed. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
4. Evers, Colin W. and Lakomski, Gabriele (1991) Knowing Educational
Administration: Contemporary Methodological Controversies in
Educational Administration Research. Oxford: Pergamon.
5. Gleeson, Denis and C. Husband (2003) “Modernizing schooling
through performance management: a critical appraisal”. Journal of
Education Policy, Vo. 18, No. 5, Pp. 499-511.
6. *Murphy, Josephy and Beck, L. (1999) "A Decade of Change: An
Overview Education." Pp.3-39 J. Murphy and B. Forsyth (Eds.)
Educational Administration: A Decade of Reform. Thousand Oak,
CA: Corwin Press
7. Harvey, David (2005). A Brief History of Neoliberalism. New York:
Oxford University Press
8. Ranson, Stewart (2003). “Public Accountability in the Age Neo-Liberal
Governance.” Journal of Education Journal, Vol. 18, No. 5,
Pp.459-480.
9. Reed, Michael (1996) “Organizational Theorizing: A Historically
Contested Terrain.” Pp.31-56 in S.R. Clegg, C. Hardy, and W.R.
Nord (Eds.) Handbook of Organization Studies. London: Sage.
10. Willower, D.J. et al. (1999) "A Brief History of Scholarship on
Education Administration." Pp. 1-24 in J. Murphy, and K.S. Louis
(Eds.) Handbook of Research on Educational Administration, 2nd
ed. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
11. Ball, Stephen J. and C. Junemann (2012). Networks, New
Governance and Education. Bristol: The Policy Press.
12. Ball, Stephen J. (2015). “Editorial: Education, Governance, and
Tyranny of Number.” Journal of Educational Policy. Vol. 30, No. 3,
Pp. 299-301. (and Special Issue on Governing by Number)
13. Chitty, Clyde (2013). New Labour and Secondary Education,
4
1994-2010. Basingstock: Palgrave Macmillan.
14. Chitty, Clyde (2014) Education Policy in Britain, 3rd Edition.
Basingstock: Palgrave.
15. Lingard, Bob et al. (2013). “”Introductory Essay: Testing Regimes,
Accountability, and Education Policy: Commensurate Global and
National Developments.” Journal of Education Policy, Vol. 28, No. 5,
Pp. 539-556. (and Special Issue on Testing Regimes,
Accountabilities and education Policy)
16. Maroy, Christian (2008). “The New Regulation forms of Educational
Systems in Europe: Towards a Post-Bureaucratic Regime.” Pp.
13-33. In N.C. Soguel & P. Jaccard (Eds.) Governance and
Performance of education Systems. Dodrecht: Springer.
17. Martin, Susan and Y. Muschamp (2008) “Education: From the
Comprehensive to the Individual.”. Pp. 91-103. In M. Powell (Ed.)
Modernising the Welfare State: The Blair Legacy. Bristol: The
Policy Press.
18. Simola, Hannu et al. (2011) “Governing by Numbers: The Rise of Data
in Education.” Pp. 96-106. In J. Ozga et al. (Eds.) Fabricating
Quality in education: Data and Governance in Europe. London:
Routledge.
3-4. Rationality: The Practical Foundation of Educational Management
to Educational Governance (II)
1. *Kalberg, Stephen (1980) “Max Weber’s Types of Ratiuonality:
Cornerstone for the Analysis of Rationaization Process in History”.
American Journal of Sociology 85 (5): 1145-1179.
2. Weber, Max (1978) Economy and Society. An Outline of Interpretive
Sociology, Vol. 1. Berkeley: University of California Press. Chapter 1.
3. Brubaker, Rogers (1984) The limits of Rationality: An Essay on the
Social and Moral Thought of Max Weber. London: George Allen &
Unwin.
4. Elster, Jon (2009) Reason and Rationality. Princeton: Princeton
University Press.
5. *Habermas, Jürgen (1981) "'Rationality'——A Preliminary
Specification." Pp. 8-42. J. Habermas. The Theory of
Communication Action, vol. one. Boston: Beacon Press.
6. Habermas, Jürgen (1976) "What is Universal Pragmatics?" PP. 1-68.
In J. Habermas. Communication and the Evolution of Society.
Boston: Beacon Press.
7. Ricoeur, Paul (1991) “Practical Reason.” Pp. 125-207. In P. Ricoeur.
From Text to Action: Essays in Hermeneutics, II. Evanston:
5
Northewestern University Press.
8. von Wright, Georg Henrik (1983) “The Foundation of Norms and
Normative Statement.” Pp. 67-82. In. G.H. von Wright. Practical
Reason. Oxford: Blackwell.
9. Ray, Larry J. and Reed Michael (1994) “ Max Weber and the
Dilemmas of Modernity”. Pp. 158-197 in L.J. Ray and M. Reed (Eds.)
Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work,
Organization and Society. London: Routledge.
10. Clegg, Stewart R. (1994) “Max Weber and Contemporary Sociology of
Organizations”. Pp. 46-80 in L.J. Ray and M. Reed (Eds.) Organizing
Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and
Society. London: Routledge
11. Forester, John (1993) Critical Theory, Public Policy and Planning
Practice: Toward a Critical Pragmatism. New York: SUNY Press.
Chapter .4.
12. Forester, John (1986) Planning in the Face of Power. Berkeley:
University of California Press. Chapter 9.
13. Healey, Patsy (1993) “Planning Through Debate: The Communicative
Turn in Planning Theory”. Pp.231-253 in F. Fischer and J.Forester
(Eds.) The Argumentative Turn in Policy Analysis and Planning.
Durham: Duke University Press.
14. Beck, Lynn G. and Foster, William (1999) “Administration and
Community: Considering Challenges, Exploring Possibilities”. Pp.
337-358. In J. Murphy and K.S. Louis (Eds.) Handbook of Research
on Educational Administration, 2nd edition. San Francisco:
Josset-Bass.
15. Begley, Paul T. “Cognitive Perspectives on Values in Administration:
A Quest for Coherence and Relevance.” Educational Administration
Quarterly 32 (3): 403-426.
16. Bottery, Mike (2000) Education, Policy and Ethics. London:
Continuuum.
5-6. Power: The Practical Foundation of Educational Management to
Educational Governance (I)
1. Scott, John (2001) Power. Cambridge: Polity.
2. Lukes, Steven, (2005) Power: A Radical View, 2nd edition. New York:
Palgrave Macmillan.
3. Clegg, Steward R. (1989) Frameworks of Power. London: Sage.
4. *Foucault, Michel (1983). "Afterword: The Subject and Power." Pp.
2080-228. In Dreyfus, Hubert L. and Rabinow, P. (1982) Michel
6
Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics, 2nd edition.
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
5. Foucault, Michel (1977/75). Discipline and Punish. London: Penguin.
6. Foucault, Michel (1978/76). The History of Sexuality: An Introduction.
New York: Vintage Books.
7. Foucault, Michel (1994/76) Two Lectures. Pp. 17-46. In M. Kelly (Ed.)
Critique and Power: Recasting the Foucault/Habermas Debate.
Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
8. Foucault, Michel (1988) “The ethic of care for the self as a practice of
freedom: An interview with Michel Foucault on January 20, 1984.”
In J. Bernauer and D. Rasmussen (Eds.). The Final Foucault.
Cambridge, Mass: The MIT Press.
9. Dreyfus, Hubert L. and Rabinow, P. (1982) Michel Foucault: Beyond
Structuralism and Hermeneutics, 2nd edition. Chicago: The
University of Chicago Press. Esp. Chapters 3 & 4.
10. Taylor, Charles (2012). “Foucault on Freedom and Truth.” Pp.
143-170. In M. Haugaard and S. R. Clegg (Eds.) Power and Politics,
volume II. Los Angeles: Sage.
11. Fraser, Nancy (2012). “Michel Foucault: A ‘Young Conservative’?” Pp.
171-190. In M. Haugaard and S. R. Clegg (Eds.) Power and Politics,
volume II. Los Angeles: Sage.
12. Walzer, Michael (2012). “The Politics of Michel Foucault.” Pp.191-205.
In M. Haugaard and S. R. Clegg (Eds.) Power and Politics, volume
II. Los Angeles: Sage.
13. *Habermas, Jugen (2012). “Hannah Arendt’s Communications
Concept of Power.” Pp.306-320. In M. Haugaar and S. R. Clegg
(Eds.) Power and Politics, volume I. Los Angeles: Sage.
14. Habermas, Jurgen (1996) Between Fact and Norms: Contributions to
a Discourse Theory of Law and Democracy. Cambridge MA: MIT
Press. Especially Chapter 4.
15. Flynn, Jeffrey Flynn (2004). “Communicative Power in Habermas’s
Theory of Democracy” European Journal of Political Theory, vol. 3,
No.4, Pp. 433-454.
16. Allen, Amy (2012) “The Unforced Force of the Better Argument:
Reason and Power in Habermas’ Political Theory.” Constellation,
Vol. 19, No. 3, Pp. 353-368.
17. Castells, Manuel (2009) Communication Power. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
18. Clegg, Steward R. (1989) “Radical Revisions: Power, Discipline and
Organizations”. Organization Studies 10 (1): 97-115.
7
19. McNeil, K. (1978) “Understanding Organizational Power: Building on
the Weberian Legacy”. Administrative Science Quarterly 23: 65-90.
20. Hardy, Cythia and Clegg, Steward (1996) “Some Dare Call It Power”.
Pp.622-641. In S.R. Clegg, C. Hardy and W.R. Nord (Eds.)
Handbook of Organization Studies. London: Sage.
21. Slate, Robert O. and Boyd, William L. (1999) “Schools as Politics”. Pp.
323-335. In J. Murphy and K.S. Louis (Eds.) Handbook of Research
on Educational Administration, 2nd edition. San Francisco:
Josset-Bass.
22. Miller, S.J., Hickson, D.J., and Wilson, D.J. (1999). “Decision-Making
in Organizations”. In S.R. Clegg, C. Hardy, and W.R. Nord (Eds.)
Managing Organizations: Current Issues. London: Sage. Pp. 43-62.
7-8. Public Reason: The Practical Foundation of Educational
Management to Educational Governance (III)
1. Simon, Herbert A. (1997). Administrative Behavior: A Study of
Decision-Making Process in Administrative Organizations, Fourth
Edition. New York: The free Press.
2. *Simon, Herbert A. (1978/1992) “Rational Decision-Making in
Business Organization.” Pp. 343-371. In Assar Lindbeck (Ed.)
Economic sciences, 1969-1980 : The Sveriges Riksbank (Bank
of Sweden) prize in economic sciences in memory of Alfred
Nobel. Singapore: World Scientific.
3. Rawls, John (1971) A Theory of Justice. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
4. Rawls, John (1993) Political Liberalism. New York: Columbia
University Press.
5. Rawls, John (1999) The Law of Peoples. Cambridge: Harvard
University Press. (The Idea of Public Reason Revisited,
Pp.129-180.)
6. Mulhall, Stephen and A. Swift (1996) Liberals and Communitarians,
2nd edition. Oxford: Blackwell.
7. Sen, Amartya (2009) The Idea of Justice. London: Allen Lane.
8. Sen, Amartya (1997). “Rational Fools: A Critique of the Behavioural
Foundations of Economic Theory”. In A. Sen. Choice, Welfare, and
Measurement. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press.
9. *Sen, Amartys (1993). Rationality and Freedom. Cambridge, Mass:
Harvard University Press. Chapter 1 & 2.
10. *Ostrom, Elinor (1998/2014) “A Behavioral Approach to the Rational
Choice Theory of Collective Action.” Pp. 121-166. In E. Ostrom & V.
8
Ostrom. Choice, Rules and Collective Action: The Ostrom on the
Study of Institutions and Governance. Colchester : ECPR Press.
11. Allen, Amy (2012) “The Unforced Force of the Better Argument:
Reason and Power in Habermas’ Political Theory.” Constellations,
Vol. 19, No. 3, Pp. 353-368.
12. MacIntyre, Alasdair (2007) After Virtue, 3rd edition. Notre Dame:
University of Notre Dame Press.
13. Taylor, Charles (1985) “What is Human Agency?” Pp. 15-44. In C.
Taylor. Philosophical Papers Vol. 1: Human Agency and Language.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
14. Taylor, Charles (1994) “Justice after Virtue.” Pp, 16-47. In J. Horton
and S. Mendus (Eds.) After MacIntyre: Critical Perspectives on the
Work of Alasdair MacIntyre. Cambridge: Polity.
15. Taylor, Charles (1995). “Cross Purposes: The Liberal-Communitarian
Debate”. In Taylor. Philosophical Arguments. Cambridge: Harvard
University Press.
16. Raz, Joseph (1999) Engaging Reason: On the Theory of Value and
Action. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Chapters 4 and 5.
17. Ellis, Ralph D. (1998). Just Results: Ethical Foundations for Policy
Analysis. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.
18. Doody, John A. (1991) “MacIntyre and Habermas on Practical
Reason.” Pp. 59-74. In C. Peden and Y. Hudson (Eds.)
Communitarianism, Liberalism, and Social Responsibility. Lewiston:
The Edwin Mellen Press.
19. Galston, William A. (1991) Liberal Purposes: Goods, Virtues, and
Diversity in the Liberal State. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
20. Gutmann, Amy and D. Thompson (2004) Why Deliberative
Democracy? Princeton: Princeton University Press.
21. Svara, James H. (1999) “Politics-Administration/Officials-Citizens:
Exploring Linkages in Community Governance.” Administrative
Theory and Praxis, Vol. 21, No. 3, Pp. 309-324.
22. Bang, Henrik P. and E. Sorensen (1999). “The Everyday Maker: A
New Challenge to Democratic Governance.” Administrative Theory
and Praxis, Vol. 21, No. 3, Pp. 325-341.
9
9-10. Social Institutions: The Practical Foundation of Educational
Management to Educational Governance (IV)
(a) Institution and Organization
1. *Scott, W. Richard (2008). Institutions and Organizations: Ideas and
Interests, 3rd Edition. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications.
2. March, James G. and J.P. Olsen (1984) “The New Institutionalism:
Organizational Factors in Political Life.” The American Political
Science Review 78: 734-749.
3. March, James G. and J.P. Olsen (1989). Rediscovering Governance.
New York: The Free Press.
4. *March, James G. and J.P. Olsen (1995). Democratic Governance.
New York: The Free Press.
5. March, James G. and J.P. Olsen (2006) “Elaborating the New
Institutionalism.” Pp. 3-22. In R.A.W. Rodes, S.A. Binder and B.A.
Rockman (Eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Political Institutions.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
6. March, James G. and J.P. Olsen (2006) “The Logic of
Appropriateness.” Pp. 689-708. In M. Moran et al. (Eds.) The
Oxford Handbooks of Public Policy. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
7. Scott, W. Richard (1994) "Institutions and Organizations: Toward a
Theoretical Synthesis." Pp, 55-80. In W.R. Scott, J.W. Meyer and
associated. Institutional Environments and Organizations: Structural
Complexity and Individualism. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications.
8. North, Douglas C. (1990) Institutions, Institutional Change and
Economic Performance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
9. Berger, Peter and T. Luckmann (1966) The Social Construction of
Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge. Harmondsworth:
Penguin.
10. Peters, B. Guy (2005) Institutional Theory in Political Science: The
‘New Institutionlaism’. London: Continuum.
11. Campbell, John L. (2004) Institutionalization Change and
Globalization. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
12. Campbell, John L. and O. K. Pedersen (2001) “The Rise of
Neo-liberalism and Institutional Analysis.” Pp. 1-24. In J.L.
Campbell and O.K. Pedersen (Eds.) The Rise of Neoliberalism and
Institutional Analysis. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
13. Meyer, John and Rowan, Brain (1978) “The Structure of Educational
Organizations.” Pp. 78-109. In M. W. Meyer and Associates (Eds.)
Environments and Organizations. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass
Publishers.
10
14. Rowan, Brian (1990) “Applying Conceptions of Teaching to
Organizational Reform.” Pp. 31-58. In R. F. Elmore and Associates
(Eds.) Restructuring Schools: The Next Generation of Educational
Reform. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers.
15. Rowan, Brain (2006) "The New Institutionalism and the Study of
Educational Organizations: Changing Ideas for Changing Times."
Pp. 15-32. In H-D Meyer and B. Rowan (Eds.) The New
Institutionalism in Education. New York: State University of New
York.
16. Spillane, James and P. Burch (2006) "The Institutional Environment
and Instructional Practice: Changing Patterns of Guidance and
Control in Public Education." Pp. 87-102. In H-D Meyer and B.
Rowan (Eds.) The New Institutionalism in Education. New York:
State University of New York.
(b) System and Lifeworld
1. Habermas, J. (1989/1962) The structural transformation of the public
sphere: An inquiry into a category of bourgeois society. Cambridge,
Mass.: MIT.
2. Janoski, T. (1998) Citizenship and Civil Society: A framework of rights
and obligations in liberal, traditional, and social democratic regimes.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Especially Ch. 1
3. *Habermas, J. (1981) The Theory of Communicative Action, vol 2.
Oxford: Polity Press. Especially Chapter VI
4. Offe, Claus (1984) Contradictions of the welfare state. Cambridge,
Mass.: MIT. Especially Chapter 4.
5. Offe, Claus. (1985) Disorganized capitalism. Cambridge: Polity.
Chapter 1 & 2.
6. Offe, Claus. (1996) Modernity and the state: East, west. Oxford: Polity
Press. Especially Chapter 3 and 6.
7. Carnoy, Martin. (1984) The state and political theory. Princeton:
Princeton University Press.
8. Johnson, Chambers (1999) “The Developmental State: Odyssey of a
Concept.” In M. Woo-Cumings (ed.) The Developmental State.
Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
9. Evans, Peter (1995) Embedded Autonomy: State and Industrial
Transformation. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Ch. 2, 3
and 10.
10. Pierson, Paul (2004) “The new politics of the welfare state.” Pp.
106-139. In T.J. Sinclair (Ed.) Global governance: Critical concepts
in political science, vol. II. London: Routledge.
11. Bowles, Samuel and Gintis, Herbert (1986) Democracy and capitalism:
11
Property, community, and the contradictions of modern social
thought. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Especially chapters 1
and 2.
12. Cerney, Philip G. (2000) “Restructuring the Political Arena:
Globalization and the Paradoxes of the Competition State.” Pp.
117-138. In R.D. Germain (Ed.) Globalization and its Critics:
Perspectives from Political Economy. London: Macmillan Press.
13. &Jessop, Bob (1999) “The Changing Governance of Welfare: Recent
Trends in its Primary Functions, Scale and Models of Coordination.”
Social Policy and Administration 33 (4), Pp. 348-359.
14. Jessop, Bob (2002) The Future of the Capitalist State. Cambridge:
Polity.
15. Becker, Ulrich (2002) Power in the Global Age. Cambridge: Polity. Esp.
Chapters 1 and 5.
16. Brown, Philip and Lauder, Hugh (2001) Capitalism and social
progress: The future of society and a global economy. New York:
Palgrove. Especially Ch. 14 (The Learning State)
17. Strange, Susan (2000) “The Defective State.” Pp. 268-287. In R.
Higgott and A. Payne (Eds.) The New Political Economy of
Globalization, Vol. 1. Cheltenham: An Elgar Reference Collection.
18. Hall, Peter A. (2001) “An Introduction to Varieties of Capitalism.” Pp.
1-70. In P.A. Hall and David Soskice (2001) (Eds.) Varieties of
Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative
Advantage. Oxford University Press.
19. Gill, Stephen R. and Law, David (2004) “Global hegemony and the
structural power of capital.” Pp.3-34. In T.J. Sinclair (Ed.) Global
governance: Critical concepts in political science, vol. II. London:
Routledge.
20. Carnoy, M. Levin, H.M. (1985) Schooling and work in the democratic
state. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Especially Ch. 9 (The
Potential and Limits of School Struggles)
21. Carnoy, M. (2000) Sustaining the new economy: Work, family, and
community in the information age. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press. Ch. 4 and 5.
22. *Castells, Manuel (1996) The rise of the network society. Information
age: Economy, society and culture, vol. 1. Oxford: Blackwell.
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