Quangos are now a permanent layer of governance in Britain. This
collection challenges the stale debate which portrays quangos as
inherently undemocratic. This book brings together practitioners,
politicians and academics to examine both the pitfalls and potential
offered by these bodies. This new perspective on the debate highlights
the democratic possibilities of quangos. The book advances and clarifies
this complex debate by examining the British reform debate in an
international context, and blends theoretical analysis with illuminating
case-studies from quango chief executives and concrete proposals for
reform.