1st Edition
Public Sector Reforms in Developing Countries Paradoxes and Practices
Introduction: Paradoxes of Public Management Reforms in Developing Countries (Charles Conteh and Ahmed Shafiqul Huque) 1. Public Management Reform in Developing Countries: Contradictions and the Inclusive State (Ahmed Shafiqul Huque and Habib Zafarullah) 2. An Appraisal of the New Public Governance as a Paradigm of Public Sector Reform in Africa (Charles Conteh) 3. Public Participation and Co-Production in the Irrigation Sector of Punjab of Pakistan (Muhammad Junaid Usma Akhtar, Denita Cepiku, & Antonio Lapenta) 4. Collaborative Governance in Brazil: Partnerships Between Governments and Non-Governmental Organizations and Their Facilitating and Restrictive Factors (Humberto Falcão Martins and Renata Bernardo) 5. Community Policing in Tanzania: Experiences and Understandings of Participation (Charlotte Cross) 6. Paradoxes of Decentralization in Thailand: Evidence from Decentralizing the Task of Illegal Drug Control to Local Governments (Patamawadee Jongruck) 7. The Political Context of Decentralization: Reflections on South Asia (Abu Elias Sarker) 8. Towards a Managerial State: Turkey’s Decentralization Reforms During the AKP Government (Evrim Tan) 9. Is Accountability an Elusive Goal of Public Management Reform? (Eris D. Schoburgh) 10. The Internationalization of Performance Management and Budgeting: Limitations in the Gulf States (Richard Common) 11. Beyond Neoliberal Public Sector Reform – A Case for a Developmental Public Service in Sub-Saharan Africa (Frank L. K. Ohemeng and Francis Y. Owusu) 12. Conclusion: Reflections on the Paradoxes of Public Management Reforms in Developing Countries (Charles Conteh and Ahmed Shafiqul Huque)
Biography
Charles Conteh is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science, Brock University, Canada
Ahmed Shafiqul Huque is Professor of Political Science at McMaster University, Canada
Public Sector Reforms in Developing Countries moves the study of contemporary reform out of the Western democracies to consider the impact of various ideas about management on public administration in other parts of the world. This is an extremely useful and informative collection of papers that should be read by scholars in administration and those in development.B. Guy Peters, Professor, University of Pittsburgh, USA






