L'administration publique en Europe centrale et orientale : apparition d'un modèle sui generis ou avatar des traditions européennes?
By: VERHEIJEN, Tony J. G.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Paris : ENA, 2003Revue Française D'Administration Publique 105-106, p. 95-108Abstract: The development in central and eastern Europe of new systems of public administration has raised interest among a number of specialists. Paradoxically however, the first years of the reform showed a lack of New Public Management elements. Only with the introduction of reforms in the Baltic States and the change of orientation in Hungary in the mid 1990s was there a significant turning point : in order to face the economic crisis, some elements of managerial reform were introduced in the administrative system, though without deeply modifying its structure. The role of administrative capacity in the European Unions admission criteria for central and eastern European countries will favor change, however limited its impactThe development in central and eastern Europe of new systems of public administration has raised interest among a number of specialists. Paradoxically however, the first years of the reform showed a lack of New Public Management elements. Only with the introduction of reforms in the Baltic States and the change of orientation in Hungary in the mid 1990s was there a significant turning point : in order to face the economic crisis, some elements of managerial reform were introduced in the administrative system, though without deeply modifying its structure. The role of administrative capacity in the European Unions admission criteria for central and eastern European countries will favor change, however limited its impact
Numéro 105-106
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