Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
SLIM21 Home
Advanced Search
My Info
Browse
Arrivals
Expected
Reference Items
Journal List
Proposals
Media List
Rules
   ActiveUsers:460Hits:17849368Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID169493
Title ProperImperial Rule, the Imposition of Bureaucratic Institutions, and their Long-Term Legacies
LanguageENG
AuthorVogler, Jan P
Summary / Abstract (Note)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 systems. Historically, Poland was split between three imperial powers with very different public administrations: Prussia, Austria, and Russia. Statistical analyses of original data collected through a survey of more than 650 Polish public administrations suggest that some present-day differences in the organization and efficiency of bureaucracies are due to imperial legacies.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Politics Vol. 71, No.4; Oct 2019: p.806-863
Journal SourceWorld Politics 2019-09 71, 4
Key WordsAustria ;  Administrative Culture ;  Austria-Hungary ;  Bureaucratic Efficiency