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New information and communications technologies and institutional change: The case of the UK criminal justice system

Christine Bellamy (Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK, and)
John Taylor (Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK)

International Journal of Public Sector Management

ISSN: 0951-3558

Article publication date: 1 July 1996

1735

Abstract

A major thrust in public service computing in the late 1990s is the building of electronic bridges between the large‐scale computer systems which have been embedded into the complex bureaucratic structures of late twentieth‐century government. This process includes the development of electronic links between government functions, across departmental boundaries and, even, across tiers of government. Increasingly, it also involves electronic data exchange with customers and suppliers. Contextualizes these changes in the managerialist agendas of contemporary government, and explores the significance of informational politics in institutional and managerial change, by examining a particularly ambitious and sensitive case, the co‐ordination of computerization in the criminal justice system. In this way, it contributes to the critique of technicist accounts of technology‐induced change, by proposing and developing a theoretical perspective on the interaction of technology, information and institutional dynamics in the “information polity”.

Keywords

Citation

Bellamy, C. and Taylor, J. (1996), "New information and communications technologies and institutional change: The case of the UK criminal justice system", International Journal of Public Sector Management, Vol. 9 No. 4, pp. 51-69. https://doi.org/10.1108/09513559610128717

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1996, MCB UP Limited

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