This article explores the contribution that local government to local government partnerships can make in bringing about more effective and sustained decentralisation through developing the capacity of local governments to deliver improved services to the communities they serve. After almost 15 years of decentralization many of Papua New Guinea’s local governments struggle to maintain essential functions. Building on existing relationships, the Commonwealth Local Government Good Practice Scheme seeks to utilize the resources and knowledge of Australian local councils in partnership with those in Papua New Guinea to build capacity and improve the management and delivery of services to communities. This article examines the program to date, o...
Community engagement has assumed a more salient role in the operations of Australia’s local governme...
In most states of Australia, legislation for some form of integrated strategic planning enables loca...
Introduction:The Commonwealth Local Government Conference 2015 – Local Government 2030: Achieving th...
There has been much discussion in recent years about the potential benefits of involving the private...
© 2015, Kauno Technologijos Universitetas. All rights reserved. This paper analyses how effectively ...
The overarching objective of the Commonwealth Local Government Good Practice Scheme (GPS) was to con...
The 1995 local-level government reforms undertaken in Papua New Guinea (PNG) were largely in respons...
This ambitious and highly informative volume is premised on both the seismic shift in the perceived ...
The origins of the Commonwealth Local Government Forum’s Pacific Project date to a 1997 roundtable i...
The subject of this paper is the District Authorities Act I have initiated, and parliament has enact...
The objective of this paper is to provide an overview of the Townsville/Port Moresby partnership act...
Papua New Guinea (PNG) has over 800 different language groups. Decentralisation in PNG continues to ...
At independence the three Melanesian states of the Pacific Islands region – Papua New Guinea (1975),...
Decentralisation continues to be well received as a strategy for improving the governance of countri...
"This paper is written from a development perspective placing good or democratic governance at the h...
Community engagement has assumed a more salient role in the operations of Australia’s local governme...
In most states of Australia, legislation for some form of integrated strategic planning enables loca...
Introduction:The Commonwealth Local Government Conference 2015 – Local Government 2030: Achieving th...
There has been much discussion in recent years about the potential benefits of involving the private...
© 2015, Kauno Technologijos Universitetas. All rights reserved. This paper analyses how effectively ...
The overarching objective of the Commonwealth Local Government Good Practice Scheme (GPS) was to con...
The 1995 local-level government reforms undertaken in Papua New Guinea (PNG) were largely in respons...
This ambitious and highly informative volume is premised on both the seismic shift in the perceived ...
The origins of the Commonwealth Local Government Forum’s Pacific Project date to a 1997 roundtable i...
The subject of this paper is the District Authorities Act I have initiated, and parliament has enact...
The objective of this paper is to provide an overview of the Townsville/Port Moresby partnership act...
Papua New Guinea (PNG) has over 800 different language groups. Decentralisation in PNG continues to ...
At independence the three Melanesian states of the Pacific Islands region – Papua New Guinea (1975),...
Decentralisation continues to be well received as a strategy for improving the governance of countri...
"This paper is written from a development perspective placing good or democratic governance at the h...
Community engagement has assumed a more salient role in the operations of Australia’s local governme...
In most states of Australia, legislation for some form of integrated strategic planning enables loca...
Introduction:The Commonwealth Local Government Conference 2015 – Local Government 2030: Achieving th...