01281pab a2200133 454500008004000000100002200040245009900062260000900161300001400170520090000184650001801084700001901102773002601121180718b2005 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aHood, Christopher aAESOP with variations: civil service competency as a case of German tortoise and British hare? c2005 ap.805-22. aAmong the most widely used stereotypes in the contemporary literature on public management reform is to portrary German administrative policy as that of a slow-moving `tortoise' in contrast to the fast-moving reform `hare'. Taking civil service competency as a point of analysis, this article questions the validity of these widely held assumptions. It does so in three steps. Following a brief comparative narrative of competency initiatives in the German and British higher civil services, the article explores to what extent the observed `Aesop with variation' pattern can be explained. It suggests that the variations can only to a limited extent be explained by `civil service competency exceptionalism' and that therefore seems to be something wrong with the way that Germany and the UK are conventionally categorized in the international public management reform literature. - Reproduced. aCivil service aLodge, Martain aPublic Administration