01753pab a2200193 454500008004000000100002700040245012200067260000900189300001500198362001200213520109600225650002601321700002001347773005101367908000601418909001001424999001701434952010801451180718b2010 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aBarima, Antwi, Kwabena aChallenges of making donor-driven public sector reform in sub-Saharan Africa sustainable: Some experiences from Ghana c2010 ap.635-647. aOct-Nov aThis article investigates the difficulties associated with the sustainability of implementing donor supported public sector reform respecting human and institutional capacity building interventions in Ghana. It is based on an exploratory case study design; it triangulates both secondary and primary sources of data. Employing self-completing questionnaire and interview schedule tools it covered 105 local government employees from national, regional, and district levels as well as interviewed 16 senior public officers in 9 public and quasi-public organizations. These primary sources were complemented with relevant secondary documents. The article finds that donor funded public sector reform initiatives can either facilitate or constrain the expected improvement promised by reform due to the financial and technical resource inadequacies experienced in Ghana. In this regard, public sector reformers have to become innovative and adaptive in delivering public services, since the mechanistic donor-driven reform agenda tends to affect the quality of service delivery. - Reproduced. aAdministrative reform aFarhad, Analoui aInternational Journal of Public Administration aN a90240 c90240d90240 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 33, Issue no: 12-13pAR90700r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR