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Reorganising the State towards more inclusive governance
New uniforms for the State: do they fit? Tracking public sector change in 8 countries
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Why women missed out on Latin America's rush for reform and renewal
Down and out in Middle England: new "freedoms" breed social exclusion
Civil service cutbacks: counting the real cost
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Consultants can
if the recipe is right
Switching the points to indirect provision:
Ghana bears witness
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September 1997 Insights Issue #23

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Reorganising the State towards more inclusive governance

A wave of public sector reforms has swept through developed, developing, and transitional countries in the past 30 years, prompting what has been labelled "a new public management revolution". A political premium has been set on such reforms, by leaderships committed to neo-liberal principles. In research, a "contested" literature of governance has emerged, reflecting the debate's ideological nature. Proponents of reform claim successful transfers of state powers; critics point to growing research evidence of flawed application and negative results. Aid agencies are also uneasy on this score. Might the State after all be the fittest agent of worthwhile economic and social change? And should we not therefore be looking for ways to revitalise rather than unravel it?

Full editorial...

Also in this issue

New uniforms for the State: do they fit?:
Tracking public sector change in 8 countries

Why women missed out on Latin America's rush for reform and renewal

Down and out in Middle England:
new "freedoms" breed social exclusion

Civil service cutbacks:
counting the real cost

Consultants can if the recipe is right

Switching the points to indirect provision:
Ghana bears witness

Coming in Issue #24: Two Cheers for Lomé
Is there a future for EU/ACP trade preferences?

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