Malcolm Sparrow


Malcolm K. Sparrow is a British academic. He is Professor of the Practice of Public Management at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He is the faculty chair of the school’s executive program “Strategic Management of Regulatory and Enforcement Agencies.”

Early life and education

In 1977, Sparrow received a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics from Trinity College, Cambridge, a Master of Arts in mathematics from the University of Cambridge, a Master of Public Administration from the Harvard Kennedy School, and a Doctor of Philosophy in applied mathematics from the University of Kent.

Police career

In 1977, Sparrow joined the British Police Service. He served for ten years, rising to the rank of Detective Chief Inspector. He was the head of the Kent County Constabulary Fraud Squad. He conducted internal affairs investigations and commanded a tactical firearms unit.
In 1988, he left the police to take up a faculty appointment at Harvard.
In his book License to Steal, Sparrow conservatively estimated that the billing fraud in the health care industry is 10% of all expenses or about $360 billion this year.

Books

  • Fundamentals of Regulatory Design
  • Handcuffed: What Holds Policing Back & the Keys to Reform
  • The Character of Harms: Operational Challenges in Control
  • The Regulatory Craft: Controlling Risks, Solving Problems, and Managing Compliance
  • License to Steal: How Fraud Bleeds America's Health Care System
  • Imposing Duties: Government's Changing Approach to Compliance
  • with Mark H. Moore and David M. Kennedy Beyond 911: A New Era for Policing
  • with Mark H. Moore ''Ethics in Government: The Moral Challenge of Public Leadership''