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Public Budgeting Systems
In: Public administration review: PAR, Volume 50, Issue 5, p. 583
ISSN: 1540-6210
The Impact of Group Discussion on the Theory-Perseverance Bias
In: The Journal of social psychology, Volume 136, Issue 1, p. 85-98
ISSN: 1940-1183
How Different Cultural and Geographic Groups Perceive the Attractiveness of Active and Inactive Feminists
In: The Journal of social psychology, Volume 119, Issue 1, p. 111-117
ISSN: 1940-1183
Guide to Rebuilding Public Sector Services in Stability Operations: A Role for the Military
The guide is designed to provide peacekeepers with a thorough and nuanced understanding on the policy, planning, cultural and ethnic implications, tradeoffs, and options for public services reconstruction. It takes the position ultimately that the host government is responsible for public goods. Stability actors and host country governments can cooperate on policy, resource allocation, and service planning, even when the majority of services may initially be provided by nonstate or external actors, but the host country is in the lead. Issues addressed include control of corruption, administration of public services, policy, resource allocation and joint budgeting for restoration, reconstruction, and maintenance. Immediately after a conflict, the flight of skilled professionals may have left little capacity for public services restoration, making it a critical priority to rebuild capacity in engineering, planning, budgeting, and maintenance as well as to reestablish the revenue generation to sustain these services. The role for stability actors is broad and critical in this effort, as they seek to restore the ability of a government to meet the expectations of its citizens and restore legitimacy and stability to a nation. ; https://press.armywarcollege.edu/monographs/1616/thumbnail.jpg
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Guide to rebuilding public sector services in stability operations : a role for the military
This guide examines the role of restoration of public services within the broader context of stability operations. The extent to which public service reconstruction takes place depends on the mission, the level of resources, and the host country context. This paper provides guidance helpful to U.S. peacekeeping personnel in planning and executing stability operations tasks related to restoration of public sector services and infrastructure. It is designed to supplement existing and emerging guidance, and is specifically relevant to addressing the needs of public sector rebuilding in a post-conflict situation by peacekeeping forces. The material presented here draws both from theory and analytic frameworks and from on-the-ground experience of practitioners. ; "October 2009." ; Includes bibliographical references (p. 40-48). ; This guide examines the role of restoration of public services within the broader context of stability operations. The extent to which public service reconstruction takes place depends on the mission, the level of resources, and the host country context. This paper provides guidance helpful to U.S. peacekeeping personnel in planning and executing stability operations tasks related to restoration of public sector services and infrastructure. It is designed to supplement existing and emerging guidance, and is specifically relevant to addressing the needs of public sector rebuilding in a post-conflict situation by peacekeeping forces. The material presented here draws both from theory and analytic frameworks and from on-the-ground experience of practitioners. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Post-Burkhead: The State of the Art or Science of Budgeting
In: Public administration review: PAR, Volume 33, Issue 6, p. 576
ISSN: 1540-6210
What Is Financial Management? Are We Inventing a New Field Here?
In: Public administration review: PAR, Volume 54, Issue 2, p. 209
ISSN: 1540-6210