2 resultados para Specific characteristics of public organizations

em Repositório da Escola Nacional de Administração Pública (ENAP)


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

A inten????o dos autores ?? fornecer subs??dios para o debate sobre a reforma da administra????o p??blica na Am??rica Latina. O artigo come??a pela caracteriza????o dos desafios colocados para a burocracia pelos problemas do monop??lio e do controle pol??tico. Em seguida, s??o analisados os modelos de administra????o p??blica adotados pelos pa??ses desenvolvidos, dado que estes constituem os principais pontos de refer??ncia para as iniciativas de reforma nos pa??ses em desenvolvimento. E, finalmente, os autores identificam as causas e os efeitos das disfun????es da administra????o p??blica na Am??rica Latina, sugerindo que as experi??ncias e o debate acad??mico relativos aos pa??ses desenvolvidos podem fornecer li????es aos pa??ses em desenvolvimento desde que n??o se perca de vista as especificidades do contexto latino-americano. Os autores sustentam que nestes pa??ses as iniciativas de reforma administrativa s??o dificultadas pelo baixo n??vel de desenvolvimento pol??tico e pela vig??ncia de padr??es informais de comportamento no ??mbito da burocracia p??blica.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The Brazilian National School of Public Administration (Escola Nacional de Administra????o P??blica ??? ENAP) is a public foundation linked to the Ministry of Planning, Budget and Management. Founded in 1986, its core mission is ???to develop competencies of civil servants in order to enhance government capacity for managing public policies???. To fulfill its mission, a wide program of learning and continued education is offered to public policy managers as well as e-learning and customized courses, in accordance to governmental and institutional strategic objectives. ENAP???s courses are framed according to governmental strategic demands for social inclusion, poverty reduction as well as economic development in order to strengthen the leading South American democracy. The range and diversity of its programs mirrors the challenges of deep changes in the jobs market and the work environment, faced by the current 550,000 federal civil servants and the over 7,000,000 state and municipal civil servants in Brazil, as last counted in 2006.