إصلاح القطاع العام وتفعيل الدور التنموي للقطاع الخاص : دراسة تحليلية لتقييم تجربة الخصخصة في السودان = Public Sector Reform and Activation of the Developmental Role of the Private Sector : Analytical Study to Assess the Experience of Privatization in Sudan

2016 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 62-82
Author(s):  
عبد الرحيم الشاذلي يحيى عبد الله
2020 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 27-40
Author(s):  
Muiris MacCarthaigh

AbstractAmongst his many interests in public administration, the practical and challenging task of implementing and evaluating public service reform has been a consistent feature of the oeuvre of research over Richard Boyle’s career (cf. Boyle, 2004, 2016; Boyle & Joyce, 1988; Boyle & Lemaire, 1999; Boyle & MacCarthaigh, 2011). In this article, the focus is on the role played by the ‘centre’ in public service reform both conceptually and in practice. The article first considers what is meant by the centre in Irish political– administrative life, before reflecting on how we might understand different forms of public sector reform governance and then applying them to the Irish case. The centre-led reforms that occurred between the 1960s up to the late 2000s are reviewed, before more recent efforts from 2011 up to the present are presented. A final section summarises the contribution.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolette van Gestel ◽  
Jean-Louis Denis ◽  
Ewan Ferlie ◽  
Aoife M McDermott

Author(s):  
Martin Lodge ◽  
Christopher Hood

Regulation is a word that has gained a wide currency in discussions of public sector reform over the past thirty years or so. Many have claimed that increased formal regulation of public sector activity reflects deep-seated ‘modernist’ changes in the functioning of state machinery. This article scrutinises regulation within government. To put the modern use of the R-word (to signify oversight of government) into context, this article begins by pointing out the relatively modest incidence and growth of articles using this term in some of the leading international journals on executive government and law and society over the last decade. This article questions whether accounts, are still able to offer much leverage over the contemporary regulation of government by itself. It also suggests that past commentators may have been rather too optimistic about the ease with which government could regulate the private sector.


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