No. 81-2, March 2021
Index
- A Comparative Study of Gender Representation and Social Outcomes: The Effect of Political and Bureaucratic Representation
- American Society for Public Administration Code of Ethics
- Celebrating 81 Years
- Comparative Public Administration in a Globalized World: Moving Beyond Standard Assumptions Toward Increased Understanding
- Comparative Studies in Public Administration: Intellectual Challenges and Alternative Perspectives
- Comparing Cost Accounting Use across European Countries: The Role of Administrative Traditions, NPM Instruments, and Fiscal Stress
- Culture and the Quality of Government
- Do Street‐Level Bureaucrats Discriminate Based on Religion? A Large‐Scale Correspondence Experiment among American Public School Principals
- Education and Public Service Motivation: A Longitudinal Study of High School Graduates
- Elevating the Case for Leadership Development Programs: Return on Investment Evaluations
- Employees’ Change Support in the Public Sector—A Multi‐Time Field Study Examining the Formation of Intentions and Behaviors
- Information for Contributors
- Issue Information
- Path‐Dependent Public Servants: Comparing the Influence of Traditions on Administrative Behavior in Developing Asia
- Paul Dragos Aligica, Peter J. Boettke, and Vlad Tarko, Public Governance and the Classical‐Liberal Perspective (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2019). 267 pp.
- P‐Hacking, P‐Curves, and the PSM–Performance Relationship: Is There Evidential Value?
- Relative Managerial Networking and Performance: The Moderating Role of Environmental Context
- Richard T. Green. Alexander Hamilton's Public Administration (Tuscaloosa: Alabama: University of Alabama Press, 2019). 272pp, $49.95 (Cloth) ISBN 978‐0‐8173‐2016‐4
- Target Interactions and Target Aspiration Level Adaptation: How Do Government Leaders Tackle the “Environment‐Economy” Nexus?
- Through the Editor's Lens: Understanding the Editorial Role Through Metaphor
- Who Should We Count as Citizens? Categorizing People in Public Administration Research
- Workforce Capacity in Municipal Government