This multiauthor reference handbook gives a detailed, objective
picture of the evolution, structure, and processes of public
administration in representative Third World countries. Written by
an international group of specialists with first-hand knowledge of
the subject, it presents empirical studies of developing nations in
Asia, the Middle East, North and Sub-Saharan Africa, the West
Indies, and Latin America. The resulting data are shaped by the
editor into a theoretical framework delineating the complex
relationships of state, bureaucracy, and class in the Third
World.
SubramaniaM's introduction provides a critical overview of
development literature in the field. Each case study begins with an
historical introduction and discusses the political, executive, and
the administrative structures and processes. Among the specific
topics covered are public enterprises, administrative departments,
personnel, financial administration, and regional and local
administrative units. The majority of the systems studied are
affected by the unregulated power of public enterprises, the
persistence of colonial legacies, and the elitism of the
bureaucracy. The concluding section relates these common elements
to the sociohistorical characteristics of the middle-class groups
that dominate both politics and public administration. Offering new
research findings and a useful theoretical synthesis, this study
will promote a clearer understanding of the internal political
processes of Third World nations and be of compelling interest to
specialists and students concerned with Third World political
economy, comparative government, and international political
economy.
General
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