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SPECIAL issue on the national performance review and public administration

Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 1997Description: p.1-247.Subject(s): Administrative reform - United States | Public administration - United States | Administrative reform In: International Journal of Public AdministrationSummary: The Symposium on the National Performance Review (NPR) and Public Administration, contained in this issue of the International Journal of Public Administration, offers some insights from prominent scholars in the field. They have presented their research and assessments of a subject with enduring importance: government reform. They have critically appraised the progress of the latest effort toward such change, but they are generally pessimistic about the prospects for improving the effectiveness and economy of the federal government. However, they have not sought to evaluate the work of the NPR as a matter of what they think ought to have been examined. Instead, they explore whether it is accomplishing what it set out to do. They do not contend, as did management luminary Peter F. Drucker recently, that this commission should have explored a far different topic - namely, possible normative purposes of government at federal, state, and local levels and potential relationships with non-government sectors (non-profit, business, family, or individual). They did not, in effect, ask the NPR to change the subject to the desirable goals of government, which would necessitate entering the realm of political philosophy and seeking to provide answers for one of its ancient and profound questions - no doubt a worthy purpose for a different symposium. - Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
Volume no: 20, Issue no: 1 Available AR34513

The Symposium on the National Performance Review (NPR) and Public Administration, contained in this issue of the International Journal of Public Administration, offers some insights from prominent scholars in the field. They have presented their research and assessments of a subject with enduring importance: government reform. They have critically appraised the progress of the latest effort toward such change, but they are generally pessimistic about the prospects for improving the effectiveness and economy of the federal government. However, they have not sought to evaluate the work of the NPR as a matter of what they think ought to have been examined. Instead, they explore whether it is accomplishing what it set out to do. They do not contend, as did management luminary Peter F. Drucker recently, that this commission should have explored a far different topic - namely, possible normative purposes of government at federal, state, and local levels and potential relationships with non-government sectors (non-profit, business, family, or individual). They did not, in effect, ask the NPR to change the subject to the desirable goals of government, which would necessitate entering the realm of political philosophy and seeking to provide answers for one of its ancient and profound questions - no doubt a worthy purpose for a different symposium. - Reproduced

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