000 01780naa a2200181uu 4500
001 0093014554137
003 OSt
005 20190218141844.0
008 100930s1995 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 fre d
100 1 _aBOUISSOU, Jean-Marie
_91352
245 1 0 _aL'administration japonaise et la chute du parti libéral démocrate
260 _aParis :
_bIIAP,
_cjanv./mars 1995
520 3 _aThree forces which constitute the "brass" triangle try to monopolise decision-making power: bureaucracy, the Liberal-Democratic Party (LDP) and big business. During the last years, the two first ones were dominating. For some commentators the bureaucracy holds the decision-making power despite of the political domination of the LDP. For others on the contrary it is the LSP which has the means to manipulate administration. At the beginning of the eighties, the LDP launched an important struggle against bureaucrats. Deregulation, decentralisation and the recovery of decision making power by citizens show that political power was taking the lead. But at the beginning of the nineties the LDP was driven away by the neo-conservaties. The administration took advantage of these political troubles. Fighting bureaucracy quickly presents three advantages for political parties: to hide their own problems, to overshadow the major issues, and to allow for being easily popular. Eventually, a change in economical policy driven by the crisis and supported by the liberals is undermining the traditional interventionism of public administration in its mere principle
773 0 8 _tRevue Française D'Administration Publique
_g73, p. 9-24
_dParis : IIAP, janv./mars 1995
_xISSN 01527401
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20100930
_b1455^b
_cDaiane
998 _a20101006
_b1715^b
_cCarolina
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c36577
_d36577
041 _afre