ABSTRACT

This book examines the status of public administration in eight countries—the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia, Sudan, and Libya—in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). This volume explores the issues, perspectives, traditions, and cultures that shape the operation of public administration in the region. This book also offers critical narratives on how the region’s governments manage the state and statecrafts regarding their governance design. It reflects on the multiplicity of public administration structures, functions, processes, and procedures, as well as reform schemes, which are critical in achieving good governance to continuously improve the human condition in the MENA region. Public Administration in the Middle East and North Africa will be of interest to scholars, practitioners, and students concerned with the ways in which technological change, knowledge accumulation, and dissemination can increase a state’s effective governance capacity.

Foreword by B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh is freely available to download on the Routledge website.

part I|80 pages

Public Administration in the Middle East Countries

chapter 1|17 pages

Theory and Practice of Public Administration Reforms

The Case of the United Arab Emirates

chapter 3|28 pages

Public Administration in the Republic of Lebanon

Recent Reforms, Current Constraints, and Future Prospects 1

part II|94 pages

Public Administration in North African Countries

chapter 5|22 pages

Governance and Public Administration Reform in Morocco

A “Glocal” Perspective

chapter 8|41 pages

Libya's Public Administration

Burdens of the Past and Challenges of Transition 1