The New Zealand (NZ) Government began its public sector reforms in 1984. The purposes of the reforms were to build a more open public sector, a plainer and clearer way of reporting, emphasising accountability and transparency (Wallace, 1993). A central focus of the reforms was to change the accounting culture by adopting accrual accounting and a 3year budgeting and planning management cycle within Government Ministries. By investigating whether or not budgetary slack is used as a risk management strategy in NZ’s new public management (NPM) control setting, this study examines how successful the reforms are, more that 20 years after their inception. Budgetary slack is the excess requirements for resources or understatement of productive capa...
Archiving of documents is essential for the organization, and the management of these archives is ne...
This paper attempts to place industrial foundations (IFs in the following; similar to trusts) in the...
It is often said that we are the first generation who will live longer than our children. Others sa...
Extending and sustaining access to rural water supplies remains central to improving the health and ...
The newly elected government proposed its first budget on 11 June 2009 with a view to support a traj...
University reseachers were delighted when Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Najib Razak recently said proc...
IT was an important meeting that attracted the executive heads and vicechancellors of Commonwealth...
This paper describes and analyzes how three national level women’s organizations in Bangladesh mobi...
peer reviewedBuildings are being demolished without taking into the account the waste generated, and...
Nowadays, mega projects are hardly in the news, except the one about a bridge that is not to be. To...
Library building usage data are weak. Electronic resource usage data are weak. We conduct occasional...
Disruptive technology continues to arrive in academic libraries, and in many cases disintermediate l...
THE New Economic Model (NEM) is shaping up to be a booster for the Higher Education Ministry's Accel...
available at: https://www.law.kuleuven.be/citip/blog/to-retain-or-not-to-retaina-decision-up-to-each...
The Emigrant Slimhole Drilling Project (“ESDP”) was a highly successful, phased resource evaluation ...
Archiving of documents is essential for the organization, and the management of these archives is ne...
This paper attempts to place industrial foundations (IFs in the following; similar to trusts) in the...
It is often said that we are the first generation who will live longer than our children. Others sa...
Extending and sustaining access to rural water supplies remains central to improving the health and ...
The newly elected government proposed its first budget on 11 June 2009 with a view to support a traj...
University reseachers were delighted when Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Najib Razak recently said proc...
IT was an important meeting that attracted the executive heads and vicechancellors of Commonwealth...
This paper describes and analyzes how three national level women’s organizations in Bangladesh mobi...
peer reviewedBuildings are being demolished without taking into the account the waste generated, and...
Nowadays, mega projects are hardly in the news, except the one about a bridge that is not to be. To...
Library building usage data are weak. Electronic resource usage data are weak. We conduct occasional...
Disruptive technology continues to arrive in academic libraries, and in many cases disintermediate l...
THE New Economic Model (NEM) is shaping up to be a booster for the Higher Education Ministry's Accel...
available at: https://www.law.kuleuven.be/citip/blog/to-retain-or-not-to-retaina-decision-up-to-each...
The Emigrant Slimhole Drilling Project (“ESDP”) was a highly successful, phased resource evaluation ...
Archiving of documents is essential for the organization, and the management of these archives is ne...
This paper attempts to place industrial foundations (IFs in the following; similar to trusts) in the...
It is often said that we are the first generation who will live longer than our children. Others sa...