This article explores the supposed shift from New Public Management (NPM) to a new era of “post-NPM” by looking at one critical case, New Zealand. It finds limited evidence of such a shift, suggesting that the wider literature needs to move to a more careful methodological treatment of empirical patterns. To contribute to such a move, this article applies a three-pronged approach to the study of changing doctrines in executive government. After setting out the broad contours of what NPM and post-NPM supposedly constitute, the article proceeds to a documentary analysis of State Services Commission doctrines; this is followed by an analysis of “Public Service Bargains” based on elite interviews and finally a case-study approach of the Crown E...
The type of government, whether the cabinet is a single-party majority, multiparty coalition, minori...
This articte discusses: the doctrinal content of the group of ideas known as 'new public manage...
This paper examines the intent and consequences of ‘new’ financial management (the ‘New Public Finan...
This article explores the supposed shift from New Public Management (NPM) to a new era of “post-NPM”...
New Zealand is frequently cited as the archetypical example of New Public Management (NPM), having g...
This paper aims to take stock of the concept of New Public Management (NPM) to see what has happened...
In January 2003 the New Zealand government announced that it intended to redress the fragmentation o...
The separation, on functional lines, of policy and operational activities in public sector departmen...
In public administration circles there are two widely accepted stylised facts about New Zealand. F...
Accountability, flexibility and the need for better governance have become, in recent decades, the m...
This book is a significant contribution to the understanding of the effects of new public management (...
This article assesses the reasons for frequent national-level administrative reforms in New Zealand ...
[Extract] Accountability, flexibility and the need for better governance have become, in recent deca...
Is restructuring the hammer of organisational change in New Zealand’s state sector? A State Services...
The United Kingdom was a "vanguard state" for experimentation with administrative reforms that came ...
The type of government, whether the cabinet is a single-party majority, multiparty coalition, minori...
This articte discusses: the doctrinal content of the group of ideas known as 'new public manage...
This paper examines the intent and consequences of ‘new’ financial management (the ‘New Public Finan...
This article explores the supposed shift from New Public Management (NPM) to a new era of “post-NPM”...
New Zealand is frequently cited as the archetypical example of New Public Management (NPM), having g...
This paper aims to take stock of the concept of New Public Management (NPM) to see what has happened...
In January 2003 the New Zealand government announced that it intended to redress the fragmentation o...
The separation, on functional lines, of policy and operational activities in public sector departmen...
In public administration circles there are two widely accepted stylised facts about New Zealand. F...
Accountability, flexibility and the need for better governance have become, in recent decades, the m...
This book is a significant contribution to the understanding of the effects of new public management (...
This article assesses the reasons for frequent national-level administrative reforms in New Zealand ...
[Extract] Accountability, flexibility and the need for better governance have become, in recent deca...
Is restructuring the hammer of organisational change in New Zealand’s state sector? A State Services...
The United Kingdom was a "vanguard state" for experimentation with administrative reforms that came ...
The type of government, whether the cabinet is a single-party majority, multiparty coalition, minori...
This articte discusses: the doctrinal content of the group of ideas known as 'new public manage...
This paper examines the intent and consequences of ‘new’ financial management (the ‘New Public Finan...