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Journal ArticleDOI

Accounting for Administrative Change in Three Asia-Pacific States: The utility of policy transfer analysis

Richard Common
- 01 Jan 1999 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 3, pp 429-438
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TLDR
The authors surveys public management change in three Asia-Pacific countries and contends that even in countries that share similar characteristics, in this case, British post-colonial bureaucracies, there is little uniformity.
Abstract
The New Public Management (NPM) appears to be of universal applicability. However, if examined on a country-by-country basis we can observe considerable variations. This article surveys public management change in three Asia-Pacific countries and contends that even in countries that share similar characteristics, in this case, British post-colonial bureaucracies, there is little uniformity. We might assume that administrative change is the result of the attraction of NPM to elites who shop around the international market for ideas, but this is a gross oversimplification. However, the apparent internation alization of NPM appears to be driven by policy transfer activity. The survey of public management in these countries reveals that although the policy transfer approach is difficult to apply empirically, it is worth pursuing as it strips away the appeal of NPM. Although in each of these countries, it is difficult to argue with any conviction that policy has been transferred from another country, a number ...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Public Management in Developing Countries: From downsizing to governance

TL;DR: A recent review as mentioned in this paper suggests the need for public management specialists to absorb a political analysis before returning to perennial management concerns, and suggests that the need to consider the domestic and political determinants of reform.
OtherDOI

Administrative reform in core civil services: application and applicability of the new public management

TL;DR: The Internationalization of Public Management constitutes one of the first attempts to examine the conceptual and practical problems which attend such policy transfers, and to make preliminary judgements about the successes and failures of public management reform in developing countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chinese administrative reforms in international perspective

TL;DR: The history of Chinese administrative reform since the early 1950s is reviewed in this paper, where the authors examine recent reform initiatives in the PRC compared with advanced industrialised democracies, searching for common attributes in order to establish, if possible, global patterns in such administrative reform initiatives.
OtherDOI

Competition, regulation and regulatory governance: an overview

TL;DR: In many countries, state regulation is also adopted internationally to protect society in the form of the regulation of working conditions, product quality, the environment, health and safety and the like as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A public management for all seasons

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the doctrinal content of the group of ideas known as "New Public Management" (NPM), the intellectual provenance of those ideas, explanations for their apparent persuasiveness in the 1980 s; and criticisms which have been made of the new doctrines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Who Learns What from Whom: a Review of the Policy Transfer Literature

TL;DR: A review of the literature on policy transfer can be found in this paper, where the authors focus on the transfer of specific policies as a result of strategic decisions taken by actors inside and outside government.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding Cross National Policy Transfers: The Case of Britain and the US

Harold Wolman
- 01 Jan 1992 - 
TL;DR: The authors examined and analyzed the actual process of policy transfer between the US and Britain and considered the relationship between policy transfer and the policymaking process, concluding that the importance of policy learning is often cited as one of the primary rationales for comparative policy analysis.