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Routledge Handbook of Public Policy in the Global South [Kõva köide]

Edited by (London School of Economics, UK), Edited by
  • Formaat: Hardback, 760 pages, kõrgus x laius: 246x174 mm, kaal: 1520 g, 79 Tables, black and white; 79 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white; 80 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge International Handbooks
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jun-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032901489
  • ISBN-13: 9781032901480
  • Formaat: Hardback, 760 pages, kõrgus x laius: 246x174 mm, kaal: 1520 g, 79 Tables, black and white; 79 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white; 80 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge International Handbooks
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jun-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032901489
  • ISBN-13: 9781032901480

This important new handbook provides a comprehensive assessment of contemporary public policy and administration in the global south. Offering incisive comparative analyses and policy-specific case studies from across Asia, Latin America, and Africa, the book aims to inform future governance research, policy, and practice.

In recent years governments in the global south have faced a complex series of challenges and crises, from the pressures of a global pandemic, to the impacts of climate change, democratic backsliding, the rise of China, and deteriorating public services. This book reflects on the transformations, convergences, and underlying trajectories that have taken place, focusing on:

• Democratic governance and institutional trust

• Public service delivery, motivation, and governance outcomes

• Non-state actors

• Policy successes and failures

• The policy implications of global governance and regionalism

The authors in this book bring together varied perspectives and experiences which will be important for researchers and policy makers wishing to understand contemporary governance models, innovations, and challenges within the Global South.



This important new handbook provides a comprehensive analysis of contemporary public policy and administration in the global south. This book presents varied perspectives and experiences, important for researchers and policy makers wishing to understand contemporary governance models, innovations, and challenges within the Global South.

Arvustused

"This timely handbook provides an invaluable addition to the literature on public policy developments in the Global South. By bringing together expertise from the Global South, it covers a broad scope of issues in this region, such as democratic governance, political trust, global public policy and governance, comparative public policy and performance, public service delivery, policy innovations and digitalization, gender policy, and crisis management. It provides much-needed South-South comparative analyses between countries also, including local government and regionalism. This volume is a major contribution to integrating a fragmented literature in this field. It offers scholars and practitioners a means to navigate many of the complex public policy challenges in the Global South."

Per Lægreid, Professor Emeritus. Department of Government, University of Bergen, Norway.

"This Handbook explores governance and policy challenges unique to the Global South. Featuring perspectives from local authors, it addresses issues such as democratic backsliding, gender reforms, digital governance, and climate adaptation. In development studies, contributions from global South authors are vital to ensure relevant and actionable insights. This handbook integrates theory and practice, offering comparative case studies and practical solutions. It is essential reading for scholars and policymakers aiming to tackle complex challenges and foster equitable progress in a dynamic global context."

Gabriel Cepaluni, Associate Professor, São Paulo State University, Brazil.

"The handbook compiles the governance and policy discussions of the Global South into a single volume. It cautions against applying Global North perspectives to analyze governance and policy trends while treating the Global South as a uniform entity. In summary, the volume offers significant insights into governance and public policy discussions in the Global South."

Winnie V. Mitullah, Research Professor & UNESCO UNITWIN Chair, Institute for Development Studies, University of Nairobi, Kenya.

"Routledge Handbook of Public Policy in the Global South presents a much-needed collection of perspectives and insights that inform public policy theory and practice from the vantage of Global South. Bringing together leading scholars and practitioners, this volume examines pressures of the pandemic, climate change, democratic backsliding and eroding public trust in governments due to inefficient public service delivery within the shifting contours of the global political economy. The handbook offers unique perspectives that question the dominant paradigms, share indigenous experiences and explores the varied policy challenges across Asia, Africa, Latin America and beyond. Grounded in contextual realities and global interdependencies, this book is an essential reference for academics, policymakers and students seeking to decolonize public policy and advance inclusive frameworks for policy design and practice."

Yaamina Salman, Professor, Institute of Administrative Sciences, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan.

1: Public Policy in the Global South PART 1: DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE AND
GLOBAL RELATIONS 2: Democratic Demand and Supply in Asia 3: Political Trust
and Its Variety in East Asia 4: Democratic Deconsolidation in East and
Southeast Asia 5: How Asians View the U.S.-China Competition and Its
Geopolitical Impact 6: How External Actors Influence on African Governance
has changed PART 2: GLOBAL PUBLIC POLICY AND DEVELOPMENT IN PERSPECTIVE 7:
Reimagining Global Governance: Overcoming Challenges in the Global South 8:
Development Paradox, the New Development Aspiration and its Convergence with
Chinas African Policy 9: Integration of ESG - Environmental, Social and
Governance Policies in Africa 10: Policy Localisation in International
Development: Insights from Policy Dialogue with Diplomats 11: Dignity and
Empowerment in Development: Exploring the Need for Changes in Practice and
Policies PART 3: COMPARATIVE PUBLIC POLICY PERFORMANCE 12: Public Policy in
China: A Collaboration and Network Approach 13: Populism and Policy
Formulation in Perspective 14: Fitting Public Policy Theories in
Understanding African Policy Systems 15: An Integrated Approach to Public
Policy Education in India 16: Bridging the research-policy divide to spur
development in Africa during the SDGs era 17: Think Tanks in Public Policy
Development: Contributions, Impact, and Challenges in the Global South PART
4: POLICY FAILURES AND SUCCESS EXPERIENCES 18: Public Policy under Conditions
of Exclusionary Ethno-Nationalism of Palestinian Citizens of Israel 19:
Health, long-term care and retirement policy in China 20: Building Access to
Affordable Condominium Homeownership: Twenty Years of the Integrated Housing
Development Program in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 21: Public Policy Effective and
Governance: A Practice-oriented Analysis of Successes and Lessons Learned in
African Contexts 22: Mapping Africas Narcotics Policy Landscape 23:
Legislative oversight of police patrols and fire alarms in Nigeria and Kenya
24: Policy Legacies and Sustainable Mining Reforms in Ghana PART 5: PUBLIC
SERVICE AND LOCAL GOVERNANCE EXPERIENCES 25: Public Service Delivery and
Quality of Governance in East Asia 26: Policy Implementation and the Politics
of Blame in China 27: Public Service Motivation in the Civil Service of Nepal
28: Citizens Assessment of Quality of Governance in Sri Lanka: An
Inquiry-Based on Post-Aragalaya Context 29: Public Participation and Social
Accountability in Local Governance in Ghana 30: Institutionalisation of
Social Accountability in Local Governance: Role of NGOs in Bangladesh 31:
Institutional Development Trajectories and Architectural Mapping of the Civil
Service System in Ethiopia PART 6: PUBLIC INNOVATIONS, DIGITALISATION AND
POLICY RESEARCH 32: Open Government Partnership Initiatives and Policy
Effectiveness in Kenya 33: Defining standards for Smart Cities in the Gulf
Cooperation Council region 34: Datafication Governance: Leveraging Big Data,
Digital Technologies, and Artificial Intelligence in Public Administration in
India 35: Realising Quality Standard Policies in Higher Education in Ugandan
Universities PART 7: WOMEN, GENDER AND POLICY CHANGE 36: The Status of Women
in the Global South: Insights from the Women, Peace and Security Index 37:
Mainstreaming gender equality through electoral gender quotas: Lessons from
Zimbabwe 38: Womens Economic Empowerment During and After COVID-19 and the
Sustainable Development Goals 39: Public Procurement: Administrative
Disruption of the policy process in Africa 40: Gender Budgeting Policies in
Indian Sub-national Governments 41: Policy Gaps Towards the Sustainable
Migration: Understanding Justice in the Bangladeshi Female Workers Diaspora
in the Gulf States PART 8: POLY-CRISES, DISASTERS, AND CLIMATE CHANGE 42:
Polycrisis! Implications for Public Policy in the Global South 43:
Understanding Crisis! Revealing a Pandora's Box in Ecuador 44: Disaster
Policy Narratives Repertoires in Latin America: Coincidences in High Contrast
45: Crisis Management in the Global South: Public Administration in a Crisis
Context 46: Social Capital and Crisis Management in South Asia 47: Disaster
Management in Afghanistan 48: Climate Change Adaptations in Urban Local
Government in Bangladesh
Gedion Onyango is a research fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Sciences Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa (FLIA). Gedion has over a decade of teaching experience and postgraduate student mentorship in higher education. He has taught at the University of Nairobi, where he was a senior lecturer, and at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. Gedions research is highly interdisciplinary, covering legislative policy-making, public accountability reforms, anti-corruption and whistleblowing reforms, democratic innovation, and innovative technologies (digital technologies in designing public services). He has published extensively and has consulted in these areas.

Ishtiaq Jamil is a professor at the Department of Government, University of Bergen, Norway. His research interests include administrative culture, gender development, public policy, institutional trust, representative bureaucracy, and governance. He has co-edited and written several books, journal articles, chapters, and research reports. He has also organised and coordinated several international projects and conferences on governance, civil service, gender mainstreaming, service delivery, and public policy in South Asia.