01294pab a2200121 454500008004000000100001800040245004200058260000900100300001300109520099800122650002601120773002601146180718b2011 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aElgie, Robert aCore executive studies two decades on c2011 ap.64-77. aThe concept of the `core executive' was introduced by Dunleavy and Rhodes in 1990. Two decades on, what is the state of core executive studies? This article argues that the language of the study of central government has been transformed. In addition, there is now a much broader consideration of the central government space, incorporating ministers, civil servants, and so on. Within core executive studies, the resource-dependency approach has become dominant. Arguably, though, with its insistence on a structural element to power and its focus on prime ministerial predominance, much of this work collapses back into an interpretation that is close to the conclusions of the pre-1990 debate. Currently, only the interpretive, ethnographic approach proposed by Rhodes and his co-authors challenges the new orthodoxy. This article suggests that a resolutely positivist account of the core executive would provide a similar challenge and spark a lively and very welcome debate. - Reproduced. aPublic administration aPublic Administration