
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In his second Reith Lecture entitled 'Cabinet: Directorate or Directory?', Sir Douglas Wass dissects the composition of the British Parliamentary Cabinet to answer the questions; how well does it do its job? And could it be more effective?
Sir Wass analyses that the British Cabinet is filled with high ranking parliamentary ministers who very rarely function as a collective group. He claims this is because each have their own proposals that they wish to promote and so they work as a group of individuals rather than a community of decision makers with a collective responsibility. He explains how this often can lead to stagnation and an abstraction of policy that cannot be put into practice. How can we increase cohesion in the Cabinet?
4.3
144144 ratings
In his second Reith Lecture entitled 'Cabinet: Directorate or Directory?', Sir Douglas Wass dissects the composition of the British Parliamentary Cabinet to answer the questions; how well does it do its job? And could it be more effective?
Sir Wass analyses that the British Cabinet is filled with high ranking parliamentary ministers who very rarely function as a collective group. He claims this is because each have their own proposals that they wish to promote and so they work as a group of individuals rather than a community of decision makers with a collective responsibility. He explains how this often can lead to stagnation and an abstraction of policy that cannot be put into practice. How can we increase cohesion in the Cabinet?
5,412 Listeners
381 Listeners
1,842 Listeners
162 Listeners
7,909 Listeners
400 Listeners
308 Listeners
1,782 Listeners
1,050 Listeners
901 Listeners
1,925 Listeners
1,081 Listeners
248 Listeners
67 Listeners
832 Listeners
403 Listeners
292 Listeners
75 Listeners
4,121 Listeners
2,985 Listeners
32 Listeners
3,289 Listeners
989 Listeners
321 Listeners