BWB - $14.99 print, $4.99 e-book.
We live in a complex and uncertain world,
one that poses unprecedented challenges for governments in democratic societies.
Short electoral cycles, impatient voters, populist movements, ‘alternative
facts’, 24/7 news cycles and powerful vested interests contribute to the often
expedient and short-termist policy positions of those who govern.
How do we move beyond this to more
considered, rational, long-term governance? How do we govern to guarantee that
an appropriate balance is struck between the demands of the present and the
needs of the future? In the memorable words of Al Gore, ‘the future whispers,
the present shouts’. What can be done, in New Zealand and elsewhere, to instil
a more robust and resilient ‘anticipatory governance’ culture in our public
service and governing institutions?
Jonathan Boston’s Safeguarding the
Future: Governing in an uncertain world is the latest illuminating addition
to the BWB Texts series, and a compelling primer for anyone who cares about
good governance and a secure, sustainable future.
Structured and written in a straight-forward
and accessible manner, Boston diagnoses the ‘presentist bias’ that
tethers too much decision-making to the here and now. He provides arguments for
a more future-oriented political and policy culture and looks at some of this
country’s most debilitating policy failures – superannuation, climate change,
child poverty, housing, to name but a few. He identifies a number of the most
pressing challenges ahead, and offers, in outline, policy and governance
prescriptions for addressing such shortcomings.
Derived from Boston’s Governing for the
Future: Designing Democratic Institutions for a Better Tomorrow (Emerald
Group Publishing, 2017), a larger project on the causes, consequences and
possible solutions to political myopia, this short book is a welcome antidote
to the ad hoc rhetoric that threatens to substitute for serious thought on the
critical business of democracy.
Safeguarding the Future
will be launched at Parliament on Thursday 23 March, following an Institute for
Governance and Policy Studies symposium, ‘Improving Intergeneration
Governance’.
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