000 01459pab a2200169 454500
008 180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aCarmichael, Paul
245 _aNorthern Ireland public administration in transition: an analysis of the civil service
260 _c2002
300 _ap.166-87.
362 _aJun
520 _aTraditionally, studies of British government have rested on the "Westminster model" in which the United Kingdom is a unitary state. Increasingly, however, the model's explanatory power has been queried. An alternative conception, the "differentiated polity model," has been developed and seeks to reflect the longstanding diversity that has characterized the institutions of British governance. One area of public administration that illustrates this variation is the civil service. The recent process of political devolution in the United Kingdom is already encouraging pressure for even greater distinctiveness and possibly separate civil service arrangements in Scotland and Wales. With particularly distinct governmental arrangements but still within the British mold, Northern Ireland offers both a vivid illustration of the differentiated polity model and a valuable indicator of how separate civil services might unfold elsewhere in the United Kingdom. - Reproduced.
650 _aCivil service - Northern Ireland
650 _aCivil service
773 _aAmerican Review of Public Administration
909 _a53036
999 _c53036
_d53036