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Dynamic regulatory governance amidst infectious diseases: analyzing agile responses and regulatory shifts in health and welfare policy Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2024-03-12 Nara Park
This article conducts a comparative analysis of the South Korean government’s responses to COVID-19, examining its initial actions and contrasting them with measures taken during other pandemics (e...
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Digitally vulnerable populations’ use of e-government services: inclusivity and access Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2024-02-26 Yeonkyung Kim, Jooho Lee
This study explores the utilisation of e-government services by digitally vulnerable individuals in South Korea. The research questions focus on understanding the current status of e-government use...
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Public administration in authoritarian regimes: propositions for comparative research Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2024-02-18 Kwan Nok Chan
Authoritarian regimes share an architecture of power that shores up unilateral control from the top while weakening bottom-up initiatives organised independently of central support. This kind of co...
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Current auditor expertise and future relevance of innovative audit technology: evidence from Indonesia public sector auditor Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2024-02-14 M. Rizal Yahya, Jalaluddin, Gamal Batara
The COVID-19 pandemic has inevitably accelerated technology adoption in almost all industries, including the auditing industry. Indonesia’s supreme audit institution (Badan Pemeriksa Keuangan-Repub...
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Driving Urban Digitalisation through a National Mission– a multilevel governance perspective of India’s data smart cities strategy Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2024-02-06 Tathagata Chatterji, Aravindan R Mukkai
This article analyses the Data Smart Cities Strategy, a key policy component under India’s ambitious 100 Smart Cities Mission, to understand how a national government-driven urban digitalisation ag...
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Public performance symposium: co-editors’ introduction Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2024-01-31 James L. Perry, Wai-Fung Lam
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Vol. 46, No. 1, 2024)
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To what extent do work environment and personality matter? Impact of political climate and employee personality on employee’s behavioural outcomes Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2024-01-07 Asma Gul, Tasneem Fatima
Drawing upon affective events theory, this study explained how organisational political climate through fear of failure affects employee behavioural outcomes, namely procrastination and submissive ...
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Crisis and choice in digital transformation: COVID-19 and the punctuated politics of government DX in Japan Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2024-01-03 Matthew Brummer, Hiroko Ueno
National political systems often favour incrementalism, vested interests, and traditional power structures resulting in a “tyranny of the status quo” that stymies efforts for disruptive and essenti...
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The changing traditions of Islamic public administration: observing processes of collision, absorption and adaptation Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-11-08 Adrian Kay
The development of the concept of Islamic Public Administration (IPA) requires consideration of its portability across spatial and temporal contexts as well as secular-religious divides. The conten...
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Abusive supervision in public service organisations: investigating the moderating effect of attribution styles Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-10-31 Abdul Kadir, Hillman Wirawan, Rudi Salam, Syahruddin Hattab, Daswati Daswati
This study explores how abusive supervision impacts employee turnover intention and performance and examines how attribution styles moderate the relationship in public service organisations. Data w...
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In Defense of the deep state Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-08-25 Francis Fukuyama
The term “deep state” originally referred to the hidden security bureaucracies in countries like Turkey and Egypt with sinister overtones. The term has been applied by American conservatives to the...
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A systematic review of the link between public service motivation and ethical outcomes Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-08-24 Euipyo Lee, Tinganxu Lewis-Liu, Shaun Khurana, Ming Lu
ABSTRACT Preventing unethical behaviour is a concern across cultures and is important for sustaining integrity and stakeholder trust in governance regimes. Encouraging self-regulation of ethical behaviour and accountability of public sector personnel has attracted multidisciplinary attention. A large body of literature has examined the link between public service motivation (PSM) and public personnel’s
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Special issue introduction: administrative burdens as a global public management phenomenon Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-08-08 Donald Moynihan, Pamela Herd
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Ahead of Print, 2023)
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Co-editors' Note Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-08-02
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Vol. 45, No. 3, 2023)
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A spirit of service to the community: public service motivation in the New Zealand public service Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-08-02 Rodney Scott, Peter Hughes
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Vol. 45, No. 3, 2023)
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Developing public service motivation in the non-Western world Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-07-25 Zeger Van der Wal, Assel Mussagulova
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Vol. 45, No. 3, 2023)
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Linking Public Service Motivation, Perceived External Career Barriers, and Public-Sector Attraction Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-06-29 Thi Quynh Trang Nguyen, Tu Phuoc Truong
ABSTRACT This study explores the association of different dimensions of public service motivation (PSM) and perceived external career barriers with the attraction, including general attractiveness and prestige, of the public sector in Vietnam. Perceived external career barriers are negatively related to the public sector’s prestige and applicants’ intentions to work in the sector. The analyses also
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What factors underlie burden tolerance in South Korea? Policy implementation domain, administrative efficiency, and bureaucratic personality Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-06-28 Jesse W. Campbell, Yongjin Ahn
Although administrative burden has been studied in relation to social policy, the experience of policy implementation as onerous is relevant to all policy domains, and citizens can experience burde...
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Leaders need to be led: complementary followership in the context of community-driven development program Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-06-02 Junesoo Lee, Jongwoo Chung, Booyuel Kim
ABSTRACT Leadership has often been recognised as a major driver for successful team effectiveness. However, even weak leadership may lead to good team performance, and it is worth studying how weak leadership can be helped and complemented by followership. To investigate the paradoxical mechanism behind leadership – followership practices, we examined (1) multidimensional figures of leadership and
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Local Government Managers’ Change-Oriented Leadership and Employees’ Change-Supportive Behaviour During COVID-19: Utilizing the Theory of Planned Behaviour Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-05-10 Wisanupong Potipiroon, Worasan Thawornprasert
ABSTRACT Past research has provided important insights on the role of public leaders in fostering employees’ change-related behaviour, but the psychological mechanisms and boundary conditions underlying this relationship remain unclear. This research relies on the theory of planned behaviour and the value-congruence model to shed light on when and how local government managers’ change-oriented leadership
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To what extent does corruption erode trust? Evidence of reputational spillovers from ten countries in the Southern African Development Community Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-03-15 Sergio Fernandez, Lianne P Malan, Natasja Holtzhausen, Michel M Tshiyoyo
ABSTRACT Emerging research indicates political corruption erodes political trust. However, previous studies have not adequately explored the question of whether corruption by a policy actor can spill over to influence trust in other policy actors. We draw insight from research and theory on collective reputation of organisations among other literature to explain why political corruption can produce
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Organizational size and public service performance: a meta-analysis and an agenda for future research Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-02-21 Richard M. Walker, Rhys Andrews, Bert George, Xuan Tu
The question whether small or large organisations are associated with the best public service performance has long been a subject of debate in public administration research, and has had profound r...
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Advancing knowledge in public administration: why religion matters Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-02-08 Edoardo Ongaro, Michele Tantardini
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Vol. 45, No. 1, 2023)
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Special issue introduction: integrating Asia Pacific influences and public management research Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-02-07 Chung-An Chen, Soojin Kim, Liang Ma
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Vol. 45, No. 2, 2023)
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Public administration in authoritarian regimes Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-01-29 B. Guy Peters
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Vol. 45, No. 1, 2023)
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Autocratization and public administration: the revolutionary-populist regime in Venezuela in comparative perspective Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Wolfgang Muno, Héctor Briceño
ABSTRACT What happens to state bureaucracies when authoritarianism emerges? How do autocrats seek to use the administration to their ends, and how does it react? The paper analyzes Venezuela as a showcase for autocratization in Latin America. Under Chavismo-Madurismo, the general objective of the regime was to expand and co-opt all the state institutions, including public administration, to subordinate
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Why and how are millennials sensitive to unfairness? Focusing on the moderated mediating role of generation on turnover intention Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-12-22 Kyuwoong Kyeong, Minjai Kim
ABSTRACT This research aims to understand why millennials value fairness highly. Specifically, this study discusses why millennials are sensitive to procedural fairness, especially unfairness. This study verifies the relationship by confirming the moderated mediation effect of generation on the relationships between procedural justice and turnover intention through organisational commitment. The results
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Job characteristics and public service motivation among highly-qualified public employees Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-09-05 Baris Kiyak, Naci Karkin
ABSTRACT Employees’ complaints about the routinisation of jobs and a decrease in their autonomy have been cited as major reasons for employee turnover in government organisations. This study analyzes the relationship between job characteristics and public service motivation (PSM) to shed light on this issue. Employing an online survey completed by employees from Turkish Regional Development Agencies
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Open or shut case? Exploring the role of openness in public sector innovation Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-09-04 Shaleen Khanal
Public organisations are increasingly practising open innovation. Declining budgets, demand for greater participation and growing complexity of today’s social problems are forcing public sector emp...
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Public sector digitalisation and stealth intrusions upon individual freedoms and democratic accountability Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-09-01 Srinivas Yerramsetti
ABSTRACT Everyday administrative practices are relatively understudied in research on illiberalism and authoritarianism. This article addresses this gap to account for the neoliberalist and technopopulistic motivations that support illiberal and authoritarian practices in a weak rule of law context. Using narrative analysis, it interprets the role of beliefs and desires of politico-administrative actors
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How do public sector auditors perceive the concept and practice of auditor Independence? Evidence from Indonesia Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-08-18 Ahmad Rizki, Mark Turner
ABSTRACT Independence is widely regarded as one of the key principles of effective auditing. This article explores the understanding of the nature of auditor independence at the level of practice in the public sector using the case study of Indonesia’s Supreme Audit Institution (Badan Pemeriksa Keuangan-Republik Indonesia – BPK-RI). The research uses a case study methodology involving in-depth interviews
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The influence of planning group diversity on the quality of local strategic plan design Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-08-17 Iseul Choi, Jeongyoon Lee, David Lee
ABSTRACT As social issues are becoming complex and challenging to solve, governments are increasingly seeking support of diverse planning groups when developing strategic plans. However, there is a lack of empirical evidence on (1) the link between planning group composition and strategic plan design quality and (2) the potential inverted U-shaped relationship of planning group diversity in terms of
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COVID-19 and employee productivity in the public sector Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-08-11 Hyesong Ha, Aarthi Raghavan, Mehmet Akif Demircioglu
COVID-19 has affected the public sector significantly. However, since it is a recent event, its impact on employee productivity, especially the individual and organisational outcomes, is not well-s...
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Public Service Motivation: Global Knowledge, Regional Perspective Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-07-18 Zeger Van der Wal, Assel Mussagulova
Published in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration (Vol. 44, No. 3, 2022)
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Are all burdens bad? Disentangling illegitimate administrative burdens through public value accounting Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-06-28 Muhammad Azfar Nisar, Ayesha Masood
Despite its usefulness for analysing the social equity footprint of policies and documenting citizens’ experiences of accessing social services, the present conceptualisation of administrative burd...
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Towards a measure of institutional public service motivation: theoretical underpinnings and propositions for future research Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-06-03 Jeannette Taylor, Gene A. Brewer, Guillem Ripoll
ABSTRACT Empirical support for institutional influences on public service motivation (PSM) has been growing in recent years. Yet, we lack a concept and a measure that captures the capacity of public institutions to energise and propel members to perform meaningful public service and pursue the common good. This study aims to address this gap by presenting a conceptual foundation of institutional PSM
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The influence of servant leadership on job performance through innovative work behavior: does public service motivation matter? Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-05-11 Bui Nhat Vuong
ABSTRACT This study empirically investigates the effects of servant leadership on job performance and notes the mediating role of innovative work behaviour and the moderating role of public service motivation. The research framework was tested using a survey of 361 civil servants working in local governments in Vietnam. The findings indicated significant positive effects of servant leadership on job
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Quality of government in the Asia Pacific region Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-05-10 Victor Lapuente, Kohei Suzuki
(2022). Quality of government in the Asia Pacific region. Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration: Vol. 44, No. 2, pp. 101-105.
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Serving society vs. the individual user? Experimental evidence on the role of public service motivation in predicting job-task preferences Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-03-29 Jessica Breaugh, Guillem Ripoll
ABSTRACT Although the term public service motivation (PSM) was coined 30 years ago, its theoretical development is still ongoing. One of these debates examines how to differentiate it from likeminded concepts. Recent theoretical development related to PSM focus on the salience of giving back to society, or non-identified beneficiaries, in contrast to individual users. To assess this distinction, empirical
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Linking quality of government to outcomes of civil service training: evidence from southeast asian countries Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Hyeon-Suk Lyu, Tae Hyung Kim, Daeun Sung, M. Jae Moon
ABSTRACT Despite the growing body of evidence about quality of government, few studies have applied the results to the outcomes of civil service training programmes. Given that the development of civil service capacity is a key driver of national development, this study explores the nexus between quality of government in Southeast Asian countries and the outcomes of civil service training programmes
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Political parties and policy transfer in authoritarianism Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-03-09 Hang Duong
ABSTRACT While recognising the significance of political actors in policy transfer, research focuses more on the role of political elites than on political parties and is dominated by studies about Western democracies rather than authoritarian states. This article examines how the ruling party shapes merit-based policy transfer in authoritarian Vietnam. It finds that with the combined developmental
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Is there passion for public service in authoritarian bureaucracies? Exploring public service motivation across regime types Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-03-02 Guillem Ripoll, Martin Rode
ABSTRACT Although previous research has explored broadly the determinants of public service motivation (PSM), little is known about how it is affected by formal institutional variations. This article examines the presence of PSM in the bureaucracies of democratic and autocratic political regimes. Merging data from the four waves of the International Social Survey Programme with a recent classification
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Special Issue Introduction: experiments in public administration research in the Asia-Pacific region Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-02-23 Cheol Liu, Tima T. Moldogaziev, Christopher Witko
(2022). Special Issue Introduction: experiments in public administration research in the Asia-Pacific region. Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration: Vol. 44, Experiments in Public Administration Research in the Asia-Pacific Region, pp. 1-3.
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Policy experimentation with impact financing: a systematic review of research on social impact bonds Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-02-23 Tima T. Moldogaziev, Cheol Liu, Mikhail Ivonchyk
ABSTRACT Social impact bonds (SIB) have become a novel and attractive policy tool to assist with service delivery to vulnerable groups. Since the first SIB in 2010 in the United Kingdom, hundreds of projects have been adopted, implemented, and continue to be developed around the world. A broad observation from current research concludes that there is a lack of consistent evidence on research foci and
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The effects of organizational diversity perception on affective commitment Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-02-10 Sangsuk Kim, Geunjoo Lee
ABSTRACT The Korean government introduced the “Balanced Public Personnel Policy” in the mid-1990s. Since then, diversity in the public sector has increased dramatically. However, studies examining the effect of diversity on organisation are scant. To fill the research gap, this study analysed the effects of organisational diversity using a sample of 778 employees from 35 Korean state-owned enterprises
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Does bureaucratic performance vary across authoritarian regimes? Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2022-02-10 Colin Knox, Saltanat Janenova
ABSTRACT This article considers the performance of bureaucracies in two authoritarian states located in Central Asia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. The former has been a consolidated authoritarian regime since its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. The latter has oscillated between a form of parliamentary democracy and authoritarianism. We examine how the countries’ bureaucracies perform under
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Exploring the implementation gap: organizational autonomy and line managers’ participation in human resource decision–making Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-09-16 Aneeqa Suhail, Trui Steen
ABSTRACT This article explores the assumption that the level of human resource (HR) autonomy of an organisation influences line managers’ participation in HR decision-making, and it seeks to understand to what extent such a participation affects the effective implementation of HR practices. The results of an empirical study of HR policies and practices in three public hospitals in Pakistan reveal that
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Citizens’ perception of government responsiveness: building an engaged citizenry Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-09-20 Irina Novikova, Saltanat Liebert
ABSTRACT Responsiveness is one of the tenets of good governance. In the post-Soviet setting, in which government officials view provision of public services to the population as government largesse, the perception of government responsiveness is particularly important in building active and engaged citizenry. This study explores a potential link between citizen perceptions of local government responsiveness
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Shifting discourses of nature in participatory processes for environmental management Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-09-27 Patrick Barrett, Raven Cretney, Priya Kurian, Naomi Simmonds
ABSTRACT The increasing use of participatory processes in environmental governance and management has implications for the way different conceptualisations of nature and the environment are recognised within environmental decision-making. This article draws on a case study of the Ōngātoro Maketū estuary restoration initiative in Aotearoa, New Zealand, to examine how shifting discourses of nature and
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Institutional correlates of public service motivation: family, religion, and high school education Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-09-27 Taehee Kim, Kiwhan Kim, Sangmook Kim
ABSTRACT The purpose of this study is to provide empirical evidence of the extent to which social institutions play a role in the development of public service motivation (PSM). This study investigates institutional factors affecting first-year undergraduate students’ PSM, focusing on family, religion, and high school education in Korea. It uses two-wave survey data collected from first-year undergraduate
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Power-sharing in governments, clarity of responsibility, and the control of corruption Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-09-17 Jinhyuk Jang
ABSTRACT How does power-sharing in governments influence the control of corruption in Asia Pacific democracies? Studies find that voters can more easily hold elected officials accountable, providing them with incentives to control corruption, if levels of clarity of responsibility are sufficiently high. Most of these studies have focused on European countries, and have tended to measure power-sharing
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Guardians in a connected world: pace matters Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-08-06
ABSTRACT What happens when the qualities that have served the administrative state - thoughtful, careful, deliberative actions - meet the demands of a world that is connected and increasingly operating in real time? Public administration systems must increasingly consider pace as a factor of success going forward.
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Symposium: COVID-19 and Big Questions of Public Administration Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-08-11
(2021). Symposium: COVID-19 and Big Questions of Public Administration. Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration: Vol. 43, No. 3, pp. 130-130.
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Revisiting “big questions” of public administration after COVID-19: a systematic review Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-08-06
ABSTRACT The COVID-19 pandemic has imposed changes on governments across the world. Scholars responded to this crisis with a wide range of comparative studies and theoretical alternatives that addressed “big questions” of public administration. To summarise what we now know about governments, citizens, and civil society as a result of this pandemic, we conduct a systematic review of 188 articles using
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Coronavirus politics and governance Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-08-31
(2021). Coronavirus politics and governance. Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration: Vol. 43, No. 3, pp. 212-217.
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Experimental research in the Asia-Pacific region: review and assessment of regional capacity Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-08-11 Wenna Chen, Binzizi Dong, Chih-Wei Hsieh, Ning Liu, Richard M. Walker, Yao Wang, Bo Wen, Peiyi Wu, Jiasheng Zhang
ABSTRACT Scholars of public administration are increasingly using experimental research to develop more robust causal inferences and greater methodological capacity. Against this backdrop, we examine the extent to which experimental research has taken hold in the Asia-Pacific region and assess regional capacity. Our review of 30 articles published by scholars based in the Asia-Pacific region in the
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What can public administration scholars learn from the economics controversies in public-private partnerships? Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-08-06 Graeme Hodge, Carsten Greve
ABSTRACT Public-Private Partnership (PPP) is the label often applied to long-term contractual arrangements when the private sector provides management and operating services for public infrastructure and puts private finance at risk. Political and economic logics have long been applied when analysing the success of such infrastructure delivery mechanisms. Mixed empirical performance results has been
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Local co-production and food insecurity: leveraging institutional advantages of partner organisations Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-08-06 Yukio Kinoshita, Brian Dollery
ABSTRACT Across the developed world food insecurity has become a growing problem, including in contemporary Japan. A common response to food insecurity has been the development of food banks typically run by voluntary associations often in partnership with public agencies and private firms. Considerable ingenuity exists in the Japanese food bank sector that can inform public policymaking in addressing
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Exploring the conditionality of public service motivation: evidence from a priming experiment Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-05-28 Sean Nicholson-Crotty, Jill Nicholson-Crotty, Danyao Li, Robert K. Christensen
ABSTRACT Scholars have demonstrated that public service motivation (PSM) may be conditional and activated in certain contexts or by particular primes. However, to date researchers have focused on the impact of positive experiences or beneficial consequences of public serving activities on employee PSM. Altruism research suggests that PSM may also respond, somewhat counterintuitively, to negative experiences
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Collaborative governance for urban sustainability: implementing solar cities Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Pub Date : 2021-05-28 Bharati Garg, Rohit Barach
ABSTRACT Today, when rapid urbanization has become an environmental concern all over the world, the concept of solar cities assumes a crucial role to play in realizing not only the sustainability potential of cities but also to transform urbanization into an opportunity. The Union Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), Government of India in 2008 launched the Solar Cities Programme to promote