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Global Perspective on Comparative and International Administration

Comparative Public Administration

ISBN: 978-0-76231-359-4, eISBN: 978-1-84950-453-9

Publication date: 22 December 2006

Abstract

The year 2000 marks not only the start of a new century and millennium, but also a turning point in world history that has, in fact, already started. Its dominant forces are well captured by the word globalization, which symbolizes a fundamental transformation in the role of the post-Westphalian state. Public Administration as the study of governance in America, and Comparative Administration with its complementary focus on the administrative problems of new states, have both been state-centered, taking for granted the salience and sovereign role of independent states in a world-system of states. Regardless of how the political institutions of these states were formed, we have assumed that they all required public bureaucracies able to attend to the most important needs of their citizens in an increasingly complicated age of industrialization and interdependence. That assumption has informed our analysis of the American system as though it were a prototype that could serve as an exemplar for all the new states born out of the collapse of the modern empires that had first occupied the world and then shredded it by their great inter-imperial wars.

Citation

Riggs, F.W. (2006), "Global Perspective on Comparative and International Administration", Otenyo, E.E. and Lind, N.S. (Ed.) Comparative Public Administration (Research in Public Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 15), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 729-733. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0732-1317(06)15032-0

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited