No. 20-1, February 2020
Index
- A commentary on the localisation of the sustainable development goals
- A commentary on the rollout of 5g mobile in the UK
- A review: The role of geospatial technology in precision agriculture
- After the storm comes the sun: A rhetorical analysis of Melbourne Storm's advertising campaigns after the 2010 salary cap scandal
- An exploratory case study focusing on the creation, and development of a new political brand: The case of Aam Aadmi Party
- Analysis of the literature on political marketing using a bibliometric approach
- Assessing the impact of climate change on Indian agriculture: Evidence from major crop yields
- Bribery and corruption in weak institutional environments By Shaomin Li: Cambridge University Press, 2019. 260 pages. Hardback. £85.00. ISBN: 9781108492898
- Climate Change and its impacts on Indian agriculture: An Econometric analysis
- Corporate social responsibility movement in an emerging economy: an institutional and social movement explanation
- Corruption and electoral campaigns in Mexico: A case study of the federal electoral process in 2018
- Crowdfunding operations: Outreach factors in developing economies
- Decentralization and citizen trust: An empirical study of policing in more and less developed countries
- Does social media matter in developing democracies? Examining its impact on citizen political participation and expression in Uganda
- External commercial borrowings by the corporate sector in India
- Foreign direct investment, information and communication technology, trade, and economic growth in the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation countries: An empirical insight
- From anti‐slavery to third sector in development: The transition of non‐governmental organisations and limitations
- Gradual institutional change and media influence: The case of Petrobras in Brazil
- How are U.K. churches using social media to engage with their congregations?
- How to build a time machine for public affairs executives
- Influence of leadership style on job satisfaction of NGO employee: The mediating role of psychological empowerment
- Interest group representation and framing in the media: A policy area perspective
- Issue Information
- Listen to us: How Dutch subnational governments together use public affairs to create a favorable position in the national and European political arenas
- Mandelafying the public service in South Africa: Towards a new theory
- Perceived public condemnation and avoidance intentions: The mediating role of moral outrage
- Post‐1994 South Africa's peacekeeping and military intervention in Southern Africa, reference from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Lesotho
- Promoting good governance in Africa: The role of the civil society as a watchdog
- Public affairs in Australia: Evolving and enhancing corporate performance
- Reconstruction of the state: Lobbying against political corruption in the Czech Republic
- Reflections on 20 years of the Journal of Public Affairs: Public affairs in a rapidly changing and globalising world
- Relationship between R&D grants, R&D investment, and innovation performance: The moderating effect of absorptive capacity
- Reputation‐Sets
- Social media in disaster communication: A case study of strategies, barriers, and ethical implications
- Stress and performance: Investigating relationship between occupational stress, career satisfaction, and job performance of police employees
- The 2020 U.S. presidential election: A litmus test
- The death of scientific knowledge in [South] Africa: An Afrocentric response to M. P. Sebola
- The quest for a better performing health system: Public expertise and corporate management recipes in France
- Traveling frames: How corporate and civil society actors try to influence public administration and courts in a case on nuclear emission data in Switzerland
- Turkish delight a public affairs study on family business: The influence of owners in the entrepreneurship orientation of family‐owned businesses
- Understanding the academic learning of university students using smartphone: Evidence from Pakistan