Designing a merit-based process for appointing boards of ABCS : lessons from the Nova Scotia reform experience
By: Aucoin, Peter.
Contributor(s): GOODYEAR-GRANT, Elizabeth.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: 2002Canadian Public Administration Publique du Canada 45, 3, p. 301-327Abstract: Efforts to design merit-based appontment systems for the boards of government agencies, boards and commissions (ABCS) have gained greater priority over the past decade in order to enhance public confidence in the integrity of the political process, improve the governance of organizations operating at arm's length from ministers, and reduce the risks to the public interest and public purse that come with incompetent boards. The Nova Scotia reform experience in this regard is instructive because this province's appointment regime not only encompasses a legislative comittee veto over ministerial appointements, a power unique to this province in the Canadian and comparative Westminster systems, but also uniquely sets the merit standard as relative-merit, that is, the appintement of the most qualified of all applicants, and not merely a qualified candidate. This article reviews this provincial experience and concludes that a merit-based appontment system that pursues relative merit can be created but only by restricting the authority of ministers to a veto over the appontment of candidates nominated by the ABCS themselvesItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
Efforts to design merit-based appontment systems for the boards of government agencies, boards and commissions (ABCS) have gained greater priority over the past decade in order to enhance public confidence in the integrity of the political process, improve the governance of organizations operating at arm's length from ministers, and reduce the risks to the public interest and public purse that come with incompetent boards. The Nova Scotia reform experience in this regard is instructive because this province's appointment regime not only encompasses a legislative comittee veto over ministerial appointements, a power unique to this province in the Canadian and comparative Westminster systems, but also uniquely sets the merit standard as relative-merit, that is, the appintement of the most qualified of all applicants, and not merely a qualified candidate. This article reviews this provincial experience and concludes that a merit-based appontment system that pursues relative merit can be created but only by restricting the authority of ministers to a veto over the appontment of candidates nominated by the ABCS themselves
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