Title: Recruitment, Education and Training A Synthesis
1Recruitment, Education and Training A Synthesis
There is no shortcut to human resource
development - Picard (2005, 231)
2Part I Golden Oldies
3Corruption by Theodore Dreiser
- Story of a wealthy banker (Cowperwood) engaged in
various troublesome financial dealings - Seeks to give to high-profile causes (university
telescope) to raise his public profile. He plans
to give several hundred thousand dollars to
university. - Is in line to benefit from a city ordinance that
would leave him directly profiting - Ordinance puts mayor, engaged in reelection
campaign soon, in a bind - Should he push this through? Ultimately, is
forced to not contest the ordinance due to
Cowperwoods pressure - Take-away corruption can work in subtle,
behind-the scenes ways brings theoretical
concepts to life through literature
4Spiro Agnew and Maryland Customs by Bruce L.
Payne
- Focuses on character in understanding political
corruption - Character psychological and moral
characteristics independence, greed, insecurity,
confidence, virtue, aggressiveness, passivity,
malice, untruthfulness (603) - Many people in positions that enable them to
profit at publics expense, but vast majority do
not
5Spiro Agnew and Maryland Customs by Bruce L.
Payne
- Example of Spiro Agnew, governor of Maryland, who
had a system of kickbacks through state contracts
set-up while governor - Agnews character fueled by resentment (605)
insensitive to conflicts of interest, ethical
issues lacked conscience action preferred to
introspection (also characteristic of political
process) - Concludes with standard corruption-fighting
recommendations (transparency, civil service,
etc.) - Ultimately if we want to combat corruption we
need to look at it through lenses of honesty and
integrity, as well as vice
6Berger, Bureaucracy East and West
- Studies of bureaucratic structure/behavior (373)
- Structure the centralization of power and
authority the establishment of a hierarchy of
offices with special requirements and
prerogatives the existence of rules governing
the exercise of functions and authority - Behavior institutional or behavioral
concomitants of structures (ex. caution in
interpreting rules, self-interest among
officials, and their conduct toward public)
7Berger, Bureaucracy East and West (Continued)
- Western concepts and findings revealing
limitations for non-Western setting (373-5) - Ex. bureaucracy in Egypt got influenced by
various culture and political control - The degree to which personal initiative is
related to bureaucratic behavior (which behavior
is more highly bureaucratic?) - Robert Mertons summary on structural and
behavioral patterns of bureaucracy - Dees it match with Egyptian officials highly
exposed to Western culture? - Reexamination
- Rationality and universalism hierarchy
discretion (378) - Bureaucratic tendencies and professionalism
8Younger, The Public Service in New States
- Colonial territories/ transition/ colonial public
servants - The speed of political evolution tends to
outstrip that speed at which the educational
system can meet the new demand - The evolution of the administrative services
should be adjusted to suit the pace of political
advance (2).
9Younger, The Public Service in New States
(Continued)
- Special list scheme intended to retain
experienced staff - Especially designed for Nigeria (7-10)
- Serving on salaries, conditions, pensions,
compensation payments - Finding continuous employment for all officers on
the special line up to at least the age of 55 - Failure of the special list
- Special report B superseding the previous place
UK encourage the Nigerian government to make use
of the freezing few younger officers
10Part II Literary Map and Synthesis
11Preview
- Administrative reform as a means to better policy
implementation - Osborne and Gaebler We do not need more
government or less government, we need better
government. . . we need better governance . . .
The process by which we collectively solve our
problems and meet our societys needs (24) - Picard Change via
- Institutions
- Functions
- Techniques
- Implementation improved policy process
- Development and Human resource management
- Corruption
12Johnson/ Picard/ Wallis/ Younger
Osborne Gaebler/ Barzelay NPM
Corruption
Administrative Reform
Development Managemet
Human Resource Management
Dreiser/ Riordon/ Heidenhimer
Jreisat/ Dunn
Berger/ Armstrong/ Baker/Picard
Policy Implementation
13Administrative reform
- Reinventing government (Osborne Gaebler)
- Crisis of confidence in government (xxi)
- Decouple policy decisions (steering) from
service delivery (rowing) (35) - Governments that are centralized, hierarchal,
strong on rules regulations no longer work are
wasteful and ineffective (12)
14Administrative reform
- Reinventing government (Osborne Gaebler)
- Comparison made to corporate sector that has made
revolutionary changes decentralizing authority,
flattening hierarchies, focusing on quality,
getting close to their customers (13) - Focus on results (14)
- Solution entrepreneurial government
- Competition, empowerment, outcomes, missions,
customers, prevent problems, earning money,
decentralization of authority, market over
bureaucratic mechanisms, catalyzing all sectors
(20-21)
15Administrative reform
- Barzelays Breaking Through Bureaucracy
- Critique of bureaucratic paradigm focused on
rules, centralization, economy, efficiency - Improved service delivery key
- Separate service and control
- Changing the culture
- Entrepreneurial spirit (77)
- New public management
- Customers, service quality and efficiency (Hood
1991 Pollitt 1990 Kickert 1997) - Synthesis
16Development and HRM
- Berger
- Studies of bureaucratic structure and behavior
(373) - Western concepts and findings revealing
limitations for non-Western setting (373-5) - The degree to which personal initiative is
related to bureaucratic behavior (375) - Three dimensions of bureaucratic behavior
rationality and universalism, hierarchy, and
discretion - Exposure to Western influences, age, and place of
higher education do not uniformly influence three
components of bureaucratic behavior (381) - Irreducible concepts of professionalism skill,
self-protection, and service (382). - Bureaucratic and professional predispositions may
not be unitary tendencies (384)
17Development and HRM
- Younger
- Colonial territories/ transition/ colonial public
servants - The evolution of the administrative services
should be adjusted to suit the pace of political
advance (2) - Special list scheme intended to retain
experienced staff - Especially designed for Nigeria (7-10)
- Wallis
- The importance of human resource management
- The scope of human resource management
- Recruitment, training, planning, staff appraisal
and MBO, morale and motivation, participation and
communication
18Development and HRM
- Johnson
- Discrepancy between the formal authority
(constitutional) and the actual location of power
(actual locus of sovereignty) in Japan - Japans feudal past and the emergence of the
developmental state during the Meiji era - The evolution of a genuine Japanese institutional
invention industrial policy of the developmental
state - E.g., creation of MITI (Ministry of International
Trade and Industry) and the renewal of the
development policy
19Development and HRM
- Armstrong
- Ways in which modern administrative elites may
relate to economic development - Two salient counter-roles both the traditional
particularistic elite role and the new
entrepreneurial role (50) - Recruitment and class role model tension between
the aristocratic and the official roles (74) - Baker
- Understanding the evolving roles of PA
- Interdependence as mutual vulnerability
- Alternatives facing American PA education
20Development and HRM
- Picard
- Institution building during the transition period
in South Africa (176) - Bureaucratic dysfunction (176)
- Good human resource performance requires a
combination of education, training, technical
knowledge, networks and values (183) - No shortcut to human resource development
- A lethal combination of patronage, corruption,
and privileges, and gravy train - Threat to the long-term institutional
effectiveness of the South Africa (230)
21Development and HRM
- Synthesis
- Development and institution-building
- HRM as development management skills
- Public policy implementation and administrative
discretion - Policy is a process as well as an authoritative
one
22Corruption
- Riordon
- Honest Graft and Dishonest Graft
- the example of the most thoroughly practical
politician, Senator Plunkitt - Dreiser
- Story of a wealthy banker (Cowperwood) engaged in
various troublesome financial dealings - Is in line to benefit from a city ordinance that
would leave him directly profiting - Take-away corruption can work in subtle,
behind-the scenes ways brings theoretical
concepts to life through literature
23Corruption
- Spiro Agnew and Maryland Customs by Bruce L.
Payne - Focuses on character in understanding political
corruption - Character psychological and moral
characteristics independence, greed, insecurity,
confidence, virtue, aggressiveness, passivity,
malice, untruthfulness (603) - Many people in positions that enable them to
profit at publics expense, but vast majority do
not - Concludes with standard corruption-fighting
recommendations (transparency, civil service,
etc.) - Ultimately if we want to combat corruption we
need to look at it through lenses of honesty and
integrity, as well as vice - Synthesis corruption as a way to improve policy
implementation and administrative effectiveness
for citizens
24References
- Baker, Randall. 1994. Comparative public
management putting U.S. public policy and
implementation in context. Westport, Conn.
Praeger. - Barzelay, Michael. 1992. Breaking Through
Bureaucracy. Berkeley University of California
Press. - Berger, Morroe. 1957. Bureaucracy East and West
in Raphaeli, Nimrod, 1967. eds. Readings in
Comparative Public Administration. Boston Allyn
and Bacon. - Dreiser, Theodore. 1969. Corruption in Green,
Philip and Michael Walzer, eds. The Political
Imagination in Literature. New York The Free
Press. - Heady, Ferrel. 2001. Public administration a
comparative perspective. 6th ed. New York Marcel
Dekker.
25References
- Heidenheimer, Arnold, Michael Johnston and Victor
T. LeVine, 1990. eds. Political Corruption A
Handbook. New Brunswick, NJ. Transaction
Publishers. - Johnson, Chalmers. 1982. MITI and the Japanese
Miracle. Stanford Stanford University Press. - Jreisat, Jamil E. 2002. Comparative public
administration and policy. Boulder, Colo. Oxford
Westview. - Osborne, David and Ted Gaebler. 1993. Reinventing
Government. New York Plume. - Peters B. Guy. 1989. The Politics of Bureaucracy.
New York London. - Picard, Louis A. 2005. The state of the state
institutional transformation, capacity and
political change in South Africa. Johannesburg
Wits University Press.
26References
- Riordon, William L. 1963. Plunkitt of Tammany
Hall. New York E.P. Dutton. - Younger, Kenneth, 1960. The Public Service I New
States. London Oxford University Press. - Wallis, Malcolm. 1989. Bureacracy Its Role in
Third World Development. London Macmillan.