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Articles

Aid-Supported Public Service Reform and Capacity Development in Post-Communist Albania

Pages 469-481 | Published online: 17 May 2013
 

Abstract

The national politico-administrative context plays a significant role in the transfer of policy from international (aid) organizations to recipient countries. In this regard, this article attempts to identify and explain some of the intervening variables facilitating the relationship between two actors in the policy transfer process, donors and bureaucrats through the case of administrative reform and capacity development in post-communist Albania, focusing on recent years. Broadly and flexibly drawing on some of the theoretical underpinnings of CitationDolowitz and Marsh (1996)policy transfer conceptual framework as well as the Europeanization theory, the article seeks to provide a greater understanding of the respective roles of those actors and the dynamics of their interaction. Thus, through an analysis of the national political and bureaucratic context, reasons for non-transfer, i.e., perceived failure of administrative reform, are presented in light of the politics of EU accession and conditionality mechanisms used to incentivize the process.

Notes

1Instruments of Pre-Accession, EC Directorate General for Enlargement.

2Public Administration Reform Strategy.

3Support for Improvement in Government and Management (a joint EU-OECD initiative).

4Komisioni i Shërbimit Civil (Albanian translation).

5Official sources indicate that unemployment rate in Albania as of 2010 was 13.5 percent Source: Albanian Institute of Statistics (INSTAT).

6Integrated Planning System.

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