Skip to content
Inside Story
About
Donate
Sign up
Search
Search
Menu
About
Donate
Sign up
Search
Search
public service
Books & arts
Something’s really, really up
Matthew Ricketson
15 November 2024
Rick Morton’s account of the robodebt scandal is a bracing reminder of unfinished business
The view from elsewhere
The efficiency paradox
Sam Freedman
26 September 2024
Keir Starmer’s cash-strapped government is looking for savings, but “efficiency dividends” create their own problems
National affairs
No longer fit for purpose
Paddy Gourley
30 August 2024
It’s time for a reborn immigration department outside Canberra’s bulging home affairs portfolio
From the archive
It’s time to abandon the Home Affairs experiment
Paddy Gourley
27 November 2023
Labor’s changes to the controversial portfolio don’t go anywhere near far enough
National affairs
Indigenous policy’s inflection point
Michael Dillon
16 October 2023
What does the referendum result mean for First Nations policymaking?
National affairs
Who’s minding the minders?
Paddy Gourley
14 September 2023
The government’s planned regulations aren’t tough enough to bring ministerial staff under control
Books & arts
Recoding government
Andrew Leigh
30 August 2023
Are governments creating efficient online systems that don’t make us feel stupid?
National affairs
Do the robodebt recommendations go far enough?
Paddy Gourley
14 July 2023
We know how to foster a frank and fearless public service. It’s time now for action
National affairs
What happened to reform “on steroids”?
Paddy Gourley
14 June 2023
Are Labor’s efforts to fix a damaged public service losing momentum?
Essays & reportage
Power without purpose?
James Walter
24 September 2021
A long process of change has reached its apogee in the prime ministership of Scott Morrison
National affairs
Who’s holding the hose?
Stuart Macintyre
22 April 2021
Why is the federal government’s record in administering its own programs so poor?
National affairs
In defence of Bridget McKenzie
Ian McAuley
30 January 2020
The National Party minister has become the scapegoat for systemically poor administration
National affairs
Long knives, short memories
James Murphy
9 December 2019
Do bureaucratic shake-ups have the benefits prime ministers are hoping for?
Books & arts
Welcome to Washminster
Amanda Walsh
11 November 2019
Books
| Has relentless scrutiny changed the bureaucracy forever?
International
The rise of megaphone bureaucracy?
Dennis Grube
26 September 2019
How civil servants are adapting to a hyper-partisan world
National affairs
Getting it right when the time is right
Joannah Luetjens, Paul ’t Hart and Michael Mintrom
16 May 2019
How do policy successes like plain-packaging laws or tighter gun controls come about?
National affairs
Public service, private interests
Paddy Gourley
7 May 2019
Cut short by the election, a parliamentary inquiry was beginning to probe the hidden costs of contracting out of government functions
National affairs
Time’s up for this failed experiment
Paddy Gourley
20 February 2019
The creation of the Department of Home Affairs broke the rules of good government. Labor should commit to dismantling it
National affairs
On a mission to save democracy
Travers McLeod, Sam Hurley and Allison Orr
7 December 2018
Despite five prime ministers in five years and policy paralysis in Canberra, Australians don’t want to do away with democracy. They want to save it
Books & arts
Australian diplomacy’s creation story
Graeme Dobell
23 May 2018
Books
| Two diplomats — one a restless innovator, the other “a master of benign neglect” — helped shape Australia’s opening up to the world
National affairs
Does transparency have its limits?
Grant Hoole
23 May 2018
South Australia’s decision to expand ICAC’s powers raises thorny questions about the balance between fairness and openness
International
Cautionary tales from the birthplace of bureaucracy
Paul ’t Hart
12 March 2018
Even in modern Germany, government maladministration can have tragic effects
National affairs
A not-very-compelling reform proposition
Paddy Gourley
16 May 2016
Another in a long line of reports on the Australian Public Service fails to understand the nature of the public sector, writes
Paddy Gourley
From the archive
A Canadian in Canberra
Jonathan Malloy
10 May 2016
A political scientist spends four months in the Australian capital
Essays & reportage
Forgetting how to govern
Anne Tiernan
3 February 2016
Why do parties have so much trouble learning from past successes and failures, asks
Anne Tiernan
National affairs
Less than frank and not quite fearless
James Murphy
14 December 2015
The Victorian auditor-general’s criticism of the quality of bureaucratic advice on the contentious East West Link raises broader concerns about the public service, writes…
Books & arts
A touch of amnesia
Paddy Gourley
1 December 2015
Books
| Laura Tingle is right to say that government must become better at remembering, writes
Paddy Gourley
, but her argument has memory lapses of its own
Books & arts
The rising tide that lifts some yachts
Jane Goodall
13 July 2015
Books
| Why are we angered by stories of Greek hairdressers retiring at fifty on public pensions, asks
Jane Goodall
, yet unmoved at the thought of bailed-out…
National affairs
The Abbott government’s war on transparency
Rodney Tiffen
5 June 2014
There’s a worrying thread running through decisionmaking in Canberra, writes
Rodney Tiffen
National affairs
Immigration’s unanswered questions
Peter Mares
3 September 2013
The immigration department is months behind in answering questions from Senate estimate committees – questions that would provide vital information about the…
Older posts