2012-11-14
“公共管理创新与发展高层论坛”之“知名学者论坛”(第二十四讲)即将举行。应我院邀请,澳大利亚堪培拉大学教授Mark Evans即将访问我院,他同时任澳大利亚和新西兰政府学院行政管理研究中心(ANZSOG institute for governance)主任,届时他将为我院师生做题为“The Governance of Recovery and the Recovery of Governance——the promise of localism in citizen-centric governance”的学术讲座。
Mark Evans教授是公共部门制度建设与治理方面的专家,在担任澳大利亚和新西兰政府学院治理研究中心主任之前,还担任过英国约克大学政治系系主任及哈利费克斯学院教务长。
讲座时间:2012年11月19日(星期一)14:00-16:00
讲座地点:求是楼320(求是楼东门进入)
讲座语言:英文
欢迎感兴趣的师生参加
附件:主讲人简介和讲座内容介绍
公共管理学院
2012年11月14日
主讲人简介:
Professor Mark Evans is the Director of the ANZSOG Institute for Governance and a specialist in institution-building and governance. Before taking up this role he was Head of the Department of Politics and Professor of Politics at the University of York in the United Kingdom and Provost of Halifax College. Mark has played an international role in supporting good administrative practices in public administration in developed and developing contexts as well as the reconstruction of public administration in war-torn societies. He has acted as a senior policy advisor, delivered training and managed evaluation projects in 22 countries including Australia, Afghanistan, Brazil, China, Kazakhstan, Sri Lanka, the UK, and Vietnam. He is the author, co-author or editor of 23 books in his field and has been the editor of the international journal Policy Studies since 2005. Recent applied research projects in Australia include evaluations of Austrade's integrity systems (2011), the National Water Commission's role in Australian water governance (2011), and DEEWR's 'Home to Work' employment program (2011).
Mark is currently working as international advisor to the Office of the Presidency in Brazil for the development of a new federal social participation policy to be launched in November 2012 and he is also working with the Strategic Engagement team at the Murray Darling Basin Authority on the role of localism in the implementation of the Murray Darling Basin Plan. Mark has been awarded honorary positions at the universities of Bath, Hull and York.
讲座内容介绍:
The Governance of Recovery and the Recovery of Governance - the promise of localism in citizen-centric governance
This lecture evaluates the promise of localism in the context of communities recovering from disasters. It considers the problem in three parts: : a) what is localism and where does it have promise?; b) what are the obstacles to the achievement of meaningful localism; c) how can localism enhance the delivery of implementation tasks through governance innovation? It understands Localism as a mode of governance for moving from relief to recovery to sustainable development involving the integration of community power and resources into a system of development governance. It argues that national and international evidence points to localism because social progress requires a co-produced outcome with citizens. It notes, however, that different localism strategies co-exist - it is the mix that matters Different localisms are required for different tasks and require different governance innovations.