Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Political Science Canadian

The Public Servant's Guide to Government in Canada

by (author) Alex Marland & Jared Wesley

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Feb 2019
Category
Canadian, General, Public Affairs & Administration
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781487594763
    Publish Date
    Feb 2019
    List Price
    $25.95
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781487594770
    Publish Date
    Jan 2019
    List Price
    $57.00
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781487594787
    Publish Date
    Dec 2018
    List Price
    $21.95

Add it to your shelf

Where to buy it

Description

The Public Servant’s Guide to Government in Canada is a concise primer on the inner workings of government in Canada. This is a go-to resource for students, for early career public servants, and for anyone who wants to know more about how government works. Grounded in experience, the book connects core concepts in political science and public administration to the real-world practice of working in the public service. The authors provide valuable insights into the messy realities of governing and the art of diplomacy, as well as best practices for climbing the career ladder.

About the authors

Alex Marland (Political Science, Memorial University of Newfoundland) was a public servant in the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador from 2003 to 2006. He coedited First Among Unequals: The Premier, Politics, and Policy in Newfoundland and Labrador and coauthored the textbook Inside Canadian Politics. His book Brand Command: Canadian Politics and Democracy in the Age of Message Control won the Donner Prize for best public policy book by a Canadian and the Atlantic Book Award for scholarly writing.

Alex Marland's profile page

Jared J. Wesley is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Alberta.

Jared Wesley's profile page

Excerpt: The Public Servant's Guide to Government in Canada (by (author) Alex Marland & Jared Wesley)

Chapter 1

 

Review of Core Concepts

 

The authors recognize that readers have different backgrounds, training, experience, and information needs. You are encouraged to peruse the chapters and content that you believe to be most applicable to your situation at a given time. Some readers may find it helpful to consult the Glossary of Terms on page 97.

 

Public servants make choices and take actions that profoundly shape Canadians’ lives every day. Our homes are safer because of the building code standards they help develop and enforce. The food we eat and the medicines we use are of higher quality and potentially lower cost because public servants provide oversight. Internet, radio, television, and print media content that we consume is influenced by policies they administer. Public servants play a role in developing and implementing all public policy related to our cars, the roads we travel, speed limits, the price of gasoline and insurance, who is licensed to drive, the availability of public transportation, whether there are bike lanes, and the rules of the road. In fact, by the time most Canadians arrive at their destination to begin the workday, chances are they will have indirectly interacted with government hundreds of times. Some may go on to have direct interactions during their day. Perhaps they will visit a government website, contact a politician, visit a hospital clinic, pay a tax bill, or argue over a parking ticket. We all regularly engage with various forms of government and, by extension, with the employees who loyally implement the policy decisions made by those holding political office.

 

In many ways, public servants stand on the front lines of Canadian democracy. Whether offering policy advice to cabinet ministers, delivering services to citizens, or working in concert with political staff, their roles require familiarity with common principles that underpin the practice of politics and governance in Canada. A refresher for some and a primer for others, this chapter summarizes core concepts about democratic governance and public administration.

 

What Is a Public Servant?

 

Generally speaking, we are concerned with the nonpartisan workers in the core public service, namely those in government departments, Crown corporations, and agencies. They are alternatively known as civil servants and bureaucrats, but for consistency we refer to them as public servants. This encompasses the permanent, salaried personnel in government and those on contracts, including short-term staff such as interns and co-operative education students. The roles and responsibilities of these employees are the focus of The Public Servant’s Guide to Government in Canada.

 

Working in government can be a demanding and rewarding caree path, one that directly employs roughly 4 million Canadians,1 as part of the world’s most effective civil service.2 Examples of the thousands of public servant job titles include:

 

• airport response specialist
• area licensing administrator
• bilingual branch library technician
• chief cook on a marine vessel
• citizen services officer
• community social service worker
• competition law officer
• director of integration and multiculturalism
• economic development analyst
• environmental planner
• equipment operator
• junior program analyst
• laboratory manager
• manager, strategic planning
• program coordinator
• public outreach education officer

 

This book emphasizes the roles and duties of public servants in the federal and provincial governments of Canada. Some content applies to employees in territorial, municipal, and Indigenous governments. Politicians and political staff are featured throughout this book because they work closely with public servants. Other people on the public payroll are not strictly considered public servants because government is not their primary employer. Public sector workers such as teachers, nurses, doctors, professors, military personnel, police and corrections officers, and others are subject to their own professional codes. They have their own separate training facilities, regulatory bodies, associations, and unions. What all of them have in common is that public sector workers are paid, at least in part, using public money. Moreover they are all subject to decisions made by the small number of decision- makers who run the government.

Editorial Reviews

"The Public Servant’s Guide is skillfully written, wry and sometimes funny."

Blacklock’s Reporter, March 2, 2019

"[This is] a book that every new and aspiring public servant should have in their learning library. Small but mighty in its 108 pages, The Public Servant’s Guide provides lots of tips, advice, and learning that would take a few years on average to accumulate."

IPAC Toronto

Other titles by