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Original Articles

Changing Governance of Australian Regional Development: Systems and Effectiveness

, &
Pages 297-315 | Received 01 Apr 2007, Published online: 17 Dec 2007
 

Abstract

Regional economic and social development is an important public issue in most countries, yet among the least successful. In Australia, some 40 years of trial and error regional strategy appear to have had limited success in securing long-range economic and social development leading to more diversified economies, population growth and converging regional wellbeing. The paper explores the nature of Australia's regional development problem and its causes as a prelude to summarising governments' changing capacity to influence and control events. Given this background, it sketches an emerging governance system, particularly in the State of New South Wales, designed to ameliorate regional adversity. Finally, it assesses the system's current and prospective functionality and impediments to system improvement.

Notes

2. Nietzschen's relevance hinges on his high regard for those individualist Übermensch whose drive and forward thinking shape future social and economic improvement, and on his distaste for bovine (docile) behaviour cowed by the weight of historical precedent (Sorensen and Epps, Citation2005).

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