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Ethical governance and society: Information technology as a new transparency paradigm

By: Rardhasaradhi, Y.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 2013Description: p.595-603.Subject(s): Information technology | Social system | Public administration In: Indian Journal of Public AdministrationSummary: The paradigm shift in governance is intricately linked with the spread of globalisation that swept through the 1990s and consolidated its philosophy by the beginning of the new millennium. The transformation, albeit, began with the New Public Management (NPM) movement that caught the imagination of the Western Europe, Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea. India, too, began to follow the NPM norms, though on a slower note. Globalisation brought in its wake the ever evolving information and communication technologies to the doorsteps of developing world countries and the process of modernising the administrative systems in conformity with the global standards began in earnest. However, conditions have not been that conducive in the developing world, including India, to move from administration to governance on account of parochialism, localisation, authoritarian systems and over all, political culture. - Reproduced.
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
Volume no: 59, Issue no: 3 Available AR101510

The paradigm shift in governance is intricately linked with the spread of globalisation that swept through the 1990s and consolidated its philosophy by the beginning of the new millennium. The transformation, albeit, began with the New Public Management (NPM) movement that caught the imagination of the Western Europe, Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea. India, too, began to follow the NPM norms, though on a slower note. Globalisation brought in its wake the ever evolving information and communication technologies to the doorsteps of developing world countries and the process of modernising the administrative systems in conformity with the global standards began in earnest. However, conditions have not been that conducive in the developing world, including India, to move from administration to governance on account of parochialism, localisation, authoritarian systems and over all, political culture. - Reproduced.

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