01447pab a2200193 454500008004000000100002600040245008800066260000900154300001400163362001200177520080600189650003400995650003401029650002601063773003301089909001001122999001701132952010401149180718b2003 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aHaruna, Peter Fuseini aReforming Ghana's public service: issues and experiences in comparative perspective c2003 ap.343-53. aMay-Jun aThis article addresses how the public service can be reformed to make it relevant to the circumstances and useful to the majority of people living and working in Ghana. In many public administration journals, reforms in Sub-Saharan Africa have received scant attention. Using Ghana as a case study, this article first summarizes and evaluates that country's reform efforts and compares them to mainstream Anglo-American reform ideas. The article comments on the conceptualization of reform based on the notion of community, encompassing the unique political, social, and cultural experiences of the people of Ghana. Finally, the article discusses what a composite formulation of the notion of community might imply for a cross-cultural understanding of comparative public administration. - Reproduced. aPublic administration - Ghana aAdministrative reform - Ghana aAdministrative reform aPublic Administration Review a57719 c57719d57719 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 63, Issue no: 3pAR58164r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR