Cover for Addressing the Human Capital Crisis in the Federal Government

Addressing the Human Capital Crisis in the Federal Government

A Knowledge Management Perspective

Book2004

Edited by:

Jay Liebowitz

Addressing the Human Capital Crisis in the Federal Government

A Knowledge Management Perspective

Book2004

 

Cover for Addressing the Human Capital Crisis in the Federal Government

Edited by:

Jay Liebowitz

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Book description

President Bush's number-one management initiative for the federal government is the Strategic Management of Human Capital. According to Knowledgeworkers.com, human capital is the ... read full description

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  2. Book chapterNo access

    Chapter One - A Broad View of Human Capital

    Pages 1-14

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    Chapter Two - The Human Capital Crisis in the Federal Government

    Pages 15-29

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    Chapter Three - Developing a Human Capital Strategy

    Pages 31-44

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    Chapter Four - The Four Pillars of Human Capital

    Pages 45-59

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    Chapter Five - Knowledge Management: The Key Pillar in a Human Capital Strategy

    Pages 61-75

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    Chapter Six - Pillar Two: Performance Management through a Knowledge Management Lens

    Pages 77-91

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    Chapter Seven - Competency Management: A Necessary Pillar in a Human Capital Strategy

    Pages 93-104

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    Chapter Eight - Change Management: The Forgotten Pillar

    Pages 105-116

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    Chapter Nine - Establishing Strategic Partnerships for Human Capital

    Pages 117-126

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    Chapter Ten - Strategic Management of Human Capital: The Future

    Pages 127-138

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    Case Study: An Operational Study of Knowledge Management Activities at the ABC Foundation

    Pages 139-167

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    GAO Report: Human Capital: Practices That Empowered and Involved Employees

    Pages 169-212

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    Index

    Pages 213-223

About the book

Publisher's Note: Transferred to Taylor & Francis as of 2011

Description

President Bush's number-one management initiative for the federal government is the Strategic Management of Human Capital. According to Knowledgeworkers.com, human capital is the accumulated value of an individual's intellect, knowledge, and experience. In the U.S. federal government, a human capital crisis exists. The factors contributing to a human capital dilemma include a knowledge bleed due to retirement eligibility, changing perspectives on work, and escalating knowledge loss. According to a Joint Hearing on the Federal Human Capital, by 2005, more than half of the 1.8 million non-postal civilian employees will be eligible for early or regular retirement. An even greater percentage of the Senior Executive Service, the government's core managers, will be eligible to leave.

All government agencies are required to develop a human capital strategy by 2005. Many of these agencies have scored a "red" (lowest rating) on the Government Scorecard in the way they are approaching their strategic management of human capital. This book is an executive briefing on developing a successful human capital strategy based on lessons learned from analyzing existing strategies at government agencies such as NASA.
Using a knowledge management perspective, Liebowitz identifies four pillars of an effective strategy and gives examples of these in practice.

President Bush's number-one management initiative for the federal government is the Strategic Management of Human Capital. According to Knowledgeworkers.com, human capital is the accumulated value of an individual's intellect, knowledge, and experience. In the U.S. federal government, a human capital crisis exists. The factors contributing to a human capital dilemma include a knowledge bleed due to retirement eligibility, changing perspectives on work, and escalating knowledge loss. According to a Joint Hearing on the Federal Human Capital, by 2005, more than half of the 1.8 million non-postal civilian employees will be eligible for early or regular retirement. An even greater percentage of the Senior Executive Service, the government's core managers, will be eligible to leave.

All government agencies are required to develop a human capital strategy by 2005. Many of these agencies have scored a "red" (lowest rating) on the Government Scorecard in the way they are approaching their strategic management of human capital. This book is an executive briefing on developing a successful human capital strategy based on lessons learned from analyzing existing strategies at government agencies such as NASA.
Using a knowledge management perspective, Liebowitz identifies four pillars of an effective strategy and gives examples of these in practice.

Key Features

* President Bush's number-one management initiative for the federal government is the Strategic Management of Human Capital: The topic of this book
* All government agencies are required to develop a plan by 2005--this is the first book to address this need
* Provides a simple framework government agencies can use to develop their strategy

* President Bush's number-one management initiative for the federal government is the Strategic Management of Human Capital: The topic of this book
* All government agencies are required to develop a plan by 2005--this is the first book to address this need
* Provides a simple framework government agencies can use to develop their strategy

Details

ISBN

978-0-7506-7713-4

Language

English

Published

2004

Copyright

Copyright © 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

Imprint

Butterworth-Heinemann

Editors

Jay Liebowitz