Significant variation in the institutions and efficiency of public bureaucracies across countries and regions are observed. These differences could be partially responsible for divergence in the effectiveness of policy implementation, corruption levels, and economic development. Do imperial legacies contribute to the observed variation in the organization of public administrations? Historical foreign rule and colonization have been shown to have lasting effects on legal systems, political institutions, and trade in former controlled territories. Imperial legacies could also explain variations in the performance of public administrations. The author uses the case of Poland to investigate the long-term effects of foreign rule on bureaucratic ...
In recent years economists and economic historians alike have reconsidered the role of the state as ...
An account of the developments of government and public administration in four European country duri...
What explains variation in institution-building under foreign occupations? Why do some state-buildin...
This article compares the status of historical legacies in explanations of administrative reform in ...
International audiencePoland was divided among three empires—Russia, Austria–Hungary, and Prussia—fo...
This paper seeks to study the long lasting effects of the Habsburg Empire's institutions on current ...
We use spatial regression discontinuity analysis to test whether the historical partition of Poland ...
Many parts of Europe were ruled by large empires in the past. After their dissolution did these empi...
Why some bureaucracies are autonomous regarding personnel policies? New Political Economy approaches...
Are the forces of globalization making governments and their public bureaucracies more similar? Or a...
Are the forces of globalization making governments and their public bureaucracies more similar? Or a...
A Transatlantic History of Public Administration Intellectual traditions are commonly regarded as cu...
This thesis investigates the empirical relationship between historical legacies and post-communist c...
"Why are some countries less corrupt and better governed than others? Challenging conventional expla...
In the present article, the problem of public authoruty’s realization by means of bureaucracy was in...
In recent years economists and economic historians alike have reconsidered the role of the state as ...
An account of the developments of government and public administration in four European country duri...
What explains variation in institution-building under foreign occupations? Why do some state-buildin...
This article compares the status of historical legacies in explanations of administrative reform in ...
International audiencePoland was divided among three empires—Russia, Austria–Hungary, and Prussia—fo...
This paper seeks to study the long lasting effects of the Habsburg Empire's institutions on current ...
We use spatial regression discontinuity analysis to test whether the historical partition of Poland ...
Many parts of Europe were ruled by large empires in the past. After their dissolution did these empi...
Why some bureaucracies are autonomous regarding personnel policies? New Political Economy approaches...
Are the forces of globalization making governments and their public bureaucracies more similar? Or a...
Are the forces of globalization making governments and their public bureaucracies more similar? Or a...
A Transatlantic History of Public Administration Intellectual traditions are commonly regarded as cu...
This thesis investigates the empirical relationship between historical legacies and post-communist c...
"Why are some countries less corrupt and better governed than others? Challenging conventional expla...
In the present article, the problem of public authoruty’s realization by means of bureaucracy was in...
In recent years economists and economic historians alike have reconsidered the role of the state as ...
An account of the developments of government and public administration in four European country duri...
What explains variation in institution-building under foreign occupations? Why do some state-buildin...