000 01911pab a2200205 454500
008 180718b2013 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aPodger, Andrew
245 _aPublic administration in China and Australia: Different worlds but similar challenges
260 _c2013
300 _ap.201-219.
362 _aSep
520 _aComparing systems of government in such different countries as China and Australia is immensely difficult. Both countries have their own distinct traditions of governance and understandings about how to organise and operate government and the services they provide. Australia with a long democratic history has developed traditions of 'responsible government' within a federal context and with competition provided by two predominant adversarial political parties. China since its revolution in 1949 has developed relatively authoritarian traditions with single-party rule and gradational hierarchic controls within a decentralised polity. Despite these differences, increasing numbers of people in each country want to understand the other country's key features of public administration, and often they start such a journey by asking questions based on their knowledge of their own governmental system to investigate the features and principles of the other. This is the approach we have taken in this paper. After reviewing the different political contexts, we explore the institutions of governance as well as the political and financial relations between levels of governments (central, provincial, local). Finally, we come back to the implications for public management and future governance arrangements. - Reproduced.
650 _aPublic administration - Australia
650 _aPublic administration - China
650 _aPublic administration
700 _aBo, Yan
773 _aAustralian Journal of Public Administration
908 _aN
909 _a103292
999 _c103288
_d103288