Handbook of comparative public administration in the Asia-Pacific Basin
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Handbook of comparative public administration in the Asia-Pacific Basin
(Public administration and public policy, 73)
M. Dekker, c1999
Available at / 27 libraries
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This stimulating reference/text examines a wide range of issues and trends in administrative reform in the Newly Industrialized or Industrializing Economies (NIEs) of the Asia-Pacific Basin and offers detailed case studies illustrating the dynamics and etiology of reform protocols. Suggesting new ways of understanding reform within a bureaucratic or political framework, the Handbook of Comparative Public Administration in the Asia-Pacific Basin highlights the role of civil service training in fostering strategic, political, social, and economic changes in Hong Kong over the past decade, provides a roadmap into the labyrinth of China's gigantic financial system, and includes nearly 600 references, tables, and drawings.
Table of Contents
- Public administration in Singapore - continuity and reform
- bureaucratic accountability in Malaysia - control mechanisms and critical concerns
- the changing nature of administrative reform - cases in Malaysia and Singapore
- administrative reform and the politician-bureaucrat perspective - visions, processes, and support for reform
- New Zealand's corporatization experience - a strategy of staying in, but beefing up?
- administrative reform in the Australian public sector
- reforming government and changing styles of Japanese governance - public administration at the crossroads
- public administration scholar-practitioner differences - a Q study of theory-practice connections in Taiwan
- government reform in Korea
- changing environmental impacts on civil service systems - the cases of China and Hong Kong
- administrative development in Hong Kong - political questions, administrative answers
- training as an instrument for organizational change in public administration in Hong Kong
- public finance in the people's republic of China - from the 1950s to the 1990s
- corruption in China - a principal-agent perspective
- public administration education in China.
by "Nielsen BookData"