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Public administration and the colonial administrator

โœ Scribed by Anthony Kirk-Greene


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
134 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0271-2075

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โœฆ Synopsis


By title, function and history, the colonial administrator was prima facie an early example of the professional administrator. Yet how far public administration was an integral element in his training and performance is questionable. By the decolonizing 1950s, public administration was still not a conspicuous feature in the administrative vocabulary. Even when the latter-day colonial administrator was subjected to the educating inยฏuence of the Journal of African Administration, neither he nor the Journal widely resorted to the use of public administration pur sang. Yet administrative training was the keyword for both. This article directs attention to the way in which colonial administrators were selected and how they were trained. Three critical, post-1950, inยฏuences on the latter-day colonial administrator are examined: the impact of the Journal of African Adminstration; the role and stang of Africa's new Institutes of Administration; and the colonial administrator's `second career' in public administration in the UK.


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