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Public leadership and public administration
1.
Presentation on the topic:Public leadership and public
administration
Presentation prepared
Novoselov Daniel and
Bashirov Lenar GMU 3-4
2.
What is Public Leadership?Public leadership has been generally described as
“a role where a person holds a public office and
serves and guides the community as a whole” for
example, a Mayor.
3.
What is Public Leadership?A form of collective leadership in which public bodies and agencies
collaborate in achieving a shared vision based on shared aims and
values and distribute this through each organisation in a collegiate
way which seeks to promote, influence and deliver improved public
value as evidenced through sustained social, environmental and
economic well-being within a complex and changing context.
4.
Thinking DifferentlyLeadership is about collective activity by communities or
groups of people; it is not about the traditional heroic view of
the leader. However, we do not need to ‘throw the baby out
with the bathwater’; leadership theories are cumulative, and
clearly, the role of the individual leader is important, but it is
not the driving factor. Thinking in a different way involves an
understanding of the complexity of leadership.
5.
Thinking DifferentlyValues play a key role in understanding these
complexities and in determining the collective
vision, goals, objectives and activities that underpin
the creation and development of the workforce
through strategic and organisational change.
6.
Public administrationPublic administration, the implementation of government policies.
Today public administration is often regarded as including also some
responsibility for determining the policies and programs of
governments. Specifically, it is the planning, organizing, directing,
coordinating, and controlling of government operations.
7.
Public administrationIn most of the world the establishment of highly trained administrative,
executive, or directive classes has made public administration a distinct
profession. The body of public administrators is usually called the civil
service. In the United States and a few other countries, the elitist class
connotation traditionally attached to the civil service has been either
consciously abandoned or avoided, with the result that professional
recognition has come slowly and only partially.