Public Administration in East Asia

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administrative reform
anti-corruption strategies
Category=JPP
CCP
Central Government
Chang Kil Lee
Chaomeng J. Huang
China
China's Public Administration
Chinese Government
Chun-Ming Chen
Chung-Lae Cho
Chung-Yuang Jan
Civil Service Entrance Exam
Civil Service Reform
Civil Service System
Civil Society
comparative governance
comparative public administration East Asia
Confucian influence
Deil S. Wright
Don-yun Chen
e-government
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Evan Berman
FY
G. Zhiyong Lan
Gdp Growth
Guoquan Chen
Harmonious Society
Heungsuk Choi
Hong-shan Yang
Information Infrastructure
intergovernmental coordination
intergovernmental relations
Japan
Jin Lo
Jing Shiang
Jun Hyun Hong
Kaifeng Yang
Kamiko Akio
Kazuhiro Asano
Ke-yong Dong
Keiichi Muto
Kengo Akizuki
Kwangho Jung
Local Allocation Tax
Local Autonomy Act
Lung-Teng Hu
M. Jae Moon
Mainland China
Masao Kikuchi
Mengzhong Zhang
Naiyi Hsiao
NPC
Open Position System
Pan Suk Kim
Pay For Performance
Performance Assessment
Performance Management Reforms
Policy Issues
Public Administration
public administration ethics
public policy processes
public sector innovation
Public Service Ethics
Qianwei Zhu
Ruichang Li
Sam Youl Lee
Seung Jong Lee
Seung-Yong Rho
South Korea
T. J. Lah
Taiwan
Taiwan's Central Government
Tong-yi Huang
Tsai-Tsu Su
Wei Zhou
Wen-Jong Juang
Wenling Tu
XiaoHu Wang
Xiaolin Xu
Yasuyuki Imanaka
Yijia Jing
Yue-chang Lue
Zhiren Zhou

Product details

  • ISBN 9781420051902
  • Weight: 1428g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 11 May 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Written by leading experts, Public Administration in East Asia: Mainland China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan examines the inner workings of governments in East Asia, in particular its public administration and related public policy processes. It focuses on the apparatus of government — the agencies, their values, context, and policies within which they operate. Organized in parallel sections, the book covers the history, public policy processes, organization, HRM, ethics, corruption, intergovernmental relations, performance management, and e-government. It discusses each of these topics separately for Mainland China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, providing an unusual and important comparative perspective. The book includes essential knowledge and facts, discussions of emerging issues, and useful resources for further reading. It addresses questions such as:

  • What is the history of public administration in East Asia?
  • How are decisions made?
  • What is the role of Confucianism in shaping public administration?
  • How does the developmental path affect public administration?
  • Why is performance management emphasized?
  • What is the state of citizen participation?
  • How are ethical underpinnings of the civil service different from the West?
  • Why are intergovernmental relations an essential issue in East Asia?
  • What are the politics behind world-class achievements in IT?
  • What is the nature of civil service reform?
  • What is the nature of efforts to combat government corruption?

You can find many books on trade policy and politics that sometimes give good insight into the operation of government agencies. You can also find a few edited books that contain single chapters on countries in the Asia-Pacific region. What is missing, however, is a single resource that provides an overview with depth on matters solely about public administration. This state-of-the-art resource brings together the fragments of existing knowledge on East Asian economies, filling the need for a comprehensive compendium that showcases the public administration practices in the region and East Asia’s innovative approaches to governance and its many challenges.

Evan M. Berman (National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan) (Edited by)