Resource Allocation in British Universities

Resource Allocation in British Universities
Author: Michael Shattock
Publisher: Open University Press
Total Pages: 200
Release: 1983
Genre: Education
ISBN:

The ways that British universities allocate their resources are discussed, with attention to different styles, techniques, and decison-making structures. Since the purpose is to describe institutional models of resource allocation, specific universities are not identified by name. After identifying the sources of income and the breakdown of expenditures for United Kingdom universities, attention is directed to procedures for allocating funds for academic purposes, research, central services, premises, furniture and equipment, and central administration. The resource allocation mechanisms used by the government and the University Grants Committee (UGC) are also reviewed, along with the effect of these mechanisms on the universities. In describing the funding of universities since the early 1970s, consideration is given to the universities' adaptation to financial stringency and adjustments to cuts in UCG income that resulted from the July 1981 allocation letters. The market-oriented approach adopted by the Cranfield Institute of Technology is also addressed. Finally, resource allocation procedures in U.S. universities are described and compared to those in Britain, and implications for British practice are considered. (SW)

Resource Allocation in Private Research Universities

Resource Allocation in Private Research Universities
Author: Daniel Rodas
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2014-06-11
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1317842650

This book explores the resource allocation process in contemporary private research universities through six richly detailed case studies. It includes an extensive discussion of historical approaches to university resource allocation. The cases are based on in-depth interviews with university presidents, provosts, deans financial officers, and department chairs. The evolution of university resource allocation systems is discussed in relation to institutional history, mission, culture, priorities, leadership, and prevailing financial condition.

Power & Authority in British Universities

Power & Authority in British Universities
Author: Graeme Moodie
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 253
Release: 2012-04-27
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1136628568

In facing the question ‘who runs the universities’, the authors have carried out over a period of years an extensive programme of interviews, both formal and informal, as well as a detailed study of documents. Their findings are written up in the language of politics – in terms of power, authority, influence, regulation and decision making. The result is thus of value both to those with a practical interest in universities and to those with a more theoretical interest in politics or organisational behaviour.

Resource Allocation in Higher Education

Resource Allocation in Higher Education
Author: William F. Massy
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 352
Release: 1996
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780472106868

Offers guidance for implementing reforms in the allocation of resources in colleges and universities

Making Policy In British Higher Education 1945-2011

Making Policy In British Higher Education 1945-2011
Author: Shattock, Michael
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education (UK)
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2012-10-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0335241867

This book examines how policy has been made in British higher education and how the results of these policies have determined the shape of higher education.

Managing Successful Universities

Managing Successful Universities
Author: Shattock, Michael
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education (UK)
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2010-09-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0335237436

Professor Mark Taylor, Dean, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick --

Handbook of Cost and Management Accounting

Handbook of Cost and Management Accounting
Author: Zahirul Hoque
Publisher: Spiramus Press Ltd
Total Pages: 381
Release: 2005
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1904905013

This handbook is intended primarily for practitioners such as accountants, auditors, financial analysts, business managers, and chief executives. The primary focus of this book is on techniques and concepts of cost and management accounting for strategic business decisions. In order to survive in the changing business environment, organizations should rethink their strategic philosophy and the role of management accounting. Management accounting systems exist to help managers make economic decisions. In preparing and assessing their strategic plans, organizations need information on many areas of their business environment. Management accounting is also in a process of change. While some businesses continue to use conventional methods of costing, performance measurement and cost analysis, increasing numbers are adopting activity based cost allocation system, strategic oriented investment decisions models, and multiple performance measures such as the Balanced Scorecard. This handbook focuses on both conventional and contemporary issues in cost and management accounting. It presents an intriguing combination of 20 chapters, separated for presentation purpose into seven themes, dealing respectively with: organizational planning and controls; costing for business decisions; pricing decisions; capital budgeting decisions; performance measurement and benchmarking; contemporary management accounting tools; and management accounting for the public sector. All chapters in this handbook provide both retrospective and modern views and commentaries by knowledgeable scholars in the field, who are able to offer unique insights on the changing role of cost and management accounting in today's businesses.

Fair Resource Allocation and Rationing at the Bedside

Fair Resource Allocation and Rationing at the Bedside
Author: Marion Danis
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 481
Release: 2014-10-02
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0190225475

Health systems need to set priorities fairly. In one way or another, part of this important task will fall to physicians. How do they make judgments about resource stewardship, and how should they do so? How can they make such decisions in a manner that is compatible with their clinical duties to patients? In this book, philosophers, bioethicists, physicians, lawyers and health policy experts make the case that priority setting and rationing contribute significantly to the possibility of affordable and fair healthcare and that clinicians play an indispensable role in that process. The book depicts the results of a survey of European physicians about their experiences with rationing and other cost containment strategies, and their perception of scarcity and fairness in their health care systems. Responding to and complementing these findings, commentators discuss why resource allocation and bedside rationing is necessary and justifiable. The book explores how bedside rationing relates to clinical judgments about medical necessity and medical indications, marginal benefits, weak evidence based medicine, off-label use. The book highlights how comparative studies of health care systems can advance more effective and fair bedside rationing through learning from one another. From a practical standpoint, the book offers a number of strategies for health care systems and clinicians to work in tandem to allocate and ration resources as fairly as possible: how to foster more attention to fairness when rationing at the bedside, how to avoid exacerbating health disparities when allocating resources, how to teach about bedside rationing to students, how to discuss rationing more explicitly in the public arena and in the doctor's office.