271 |
Sensitivity of state aid allocation to measures of needs and resources in local governmentsBaus, Adam D. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--West Virginia University, 2002. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains vi, 56 p. Vita. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 40-43).
|
272 |
Urban governance and "creative industry clusters" in Shanghai's urban developmentZheng, Jie, Jane, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 338-369). Also available in print.
|
273 |
Violence against women in post-Mao China : international human rights norms and local law /Chang, Catherine Kuo-Shu. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 390-421).
|
274 |
A proposal for a regionalized police department for South Whitehall, North Whitehall and Upper Macungie TownshipsMoyer, Jodi L. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (M.P.A.)--Kutztown University of Pennsylvania, 1995. / Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 45-06, page: 2953. Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaf 84).
|
275 |
The role and incentives of Chinese local governments in solar PV overinvestmentXia, Yu, active 2013 25 October 2013 (has links)
Through an analysis of the political structure, fiscal system, and financing mechanisms at the local level in China, this study seeks to investigate the incentives that prompted local Chinese governments to overinvest in the solar photovoltaics (PV) industry. I find that local governments have several incentives to promote economic development by supporting local industries; their support of China’s PV industry illustrates these incentives. Specifically, we find that there are three major incentives for local governments in China to overinvest in the solar PV industry. First, due to the nature of China’s tax policy, local governments have supported the PV sector to increase local revenue. Second, as these industries have become significant sources of local employment, it is hard to stop supporting them now that PV companies are having difficulties. Third, local officials seek promotions under the economic indicator system
by gaining higher GDP. PV companies have been very helpful in contributing to local economic growth, thereby advancing the careers of government officials. Farsighted provinces like Jiangsu used the strength of their existing industrial base and favorable geographical location (proximity to ports) to attract visionary innovators and investors for building their PV manufacturing bases. Thanks to the distorted local political and economic incentives in China, this early wave of PV industry investments preceded a flood of imitating local governments that sought to expand their own PV manufacturing. This uncoordinated, irrational exuberance stemming from distorted, bottom-up local incentives has led to the massive PV manufacturing overcapacity in China. / text
|
276 |
On public values and information technology in government : a critical discourse analysis of trade regulations in MexicoBonina, Carla January 2012 (has links)
The use of the internet and related information and communication technologies (ICT) in public administration (known as 'e-government') has gained notable space within the processes of public sector reform. Arguably, ICT provide an attractive strategy to reorganize internal government tasks, routines and processes and to make them more efficient, responsive as well as accountable to citizens. Yet, the linkages between public values and e-government programmes remain understudies or taken for granted. My research focuses on this particular aspect of public sector reforms and organising. It engages with the debates towards modernisation of central government services while contributing to discussion of the relation between technologically induced programmes and public values over time. Using critical discourse analysis, I trace the discourses on public values and technology within a longitudinal case of a technology-enabled platform to facilitate foreign trade regulations in Mexico - the Mexican Single Window for Foreign Trade. In my empirical analysis, I examine a combination of key government texts and extensive data from fieldwork to address two related questions: what public values are presented, enacted or marginalised during the trajectory of the case, and how these values are enacted and operationalised into technology over time. The analysis reveals four distinctive discourses on public values and technology: 'technical efficiency', 'legality and honesty', 'robustness' and '(forced) cooperation'. The analysis shows that while the technical efficiency cluster - commonly associated to the new public management ethos - is dominating, it cohabits with and is reinforced by other values more broadly related to traditional public administration and the bureaucratic ethos - that is, legality and honesty. In addition, the analysis shows that these four distinctive discourses have been materialised in technology in different degrees, giving rise to tensions and contestation over time. In light of the findings, I draw implications for theorizing public values and technology innovation within public sector reforms in a given context.
|
277 |
EXTERNALITY CONSIDERATIONS AND THEIR EFFECT ON THE SUPPLY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT SERVICESMoore, Sheila Jane, 1947- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
|
278 |
Urban popular movements, political parties, and the state in post-authoritarian Peru : the local government nexusSchünwälder, Gerd January 1995 (has links)
This dissertation examines the possible impact of direct political participation by urban popular movements at the level of local government. It is argued that these movements harbour a democratic potential, which is contained in their social, cultural, and political practices, as well as in the collective identities of their participants. The relevance of this democratic potential derives from the fact that it could serve to democratize other political actors, particularly political parties, and to render local political institutions more democratic and efficient, depending on three conditions. First, effective political decentralization has to result in the creation of institutional openings for popular participation at the local level. Second, in order to overcome their various limitations and to project their potential for change into the political arena, urban popular movements have to form alliances with other actors, particularly political parties. Third, since such alliances often result in cooptive pressures, urban popular movements should strive to form multiple alliances with more than one actor in order to better preserve their autonomy. In the second part of the dissertation, this theoretical framework is applied to a study of popular participation at different levels of local government in Lima, Peru. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
|
279 |
Administration of the valuation of property at the local government level with special reference to the Durban Municipality.Garbharran, Hari Lall. 02 December 2013 (has links)
In this dissertation, a study is undertaken of the
administration of the valuation of property at the local
government level with special reference to the Durban
Municipality.
The establishment of local authorities is a direct result
of the Government's policy to provide goods and services
for local communities. Consequently, it is significant
to locate the place of local authorities in the
constellation of public institutions, and to examine
their rapidly increasing number of functions. Past
legislation, authorising the establishment of local
authorities, coupled with a discussion of the Regional
Services Councils Act, 1985 (Act 109 of 1985), provide
the necessary insight required for the understanding of
the property valuation function by local authorities.
The principles pertaining to the theory of valuation
are explored, with particular emphasis on the impact of
supply and demand on the valuation of property. The
valuer, who performs numerous functions, is an important
cog in the valuation process. Since the valuation of
property is a prerequisite to the rating of property,
it is also useful to examine the latter aspect to
appreciate the interaction between valuation and rating.
Legislation pertaining to valuation is voluminous. At
the Central Government level, the Department of Public
Works and Land Affairs is responsible for the valuation
of property. The Expropriation Act, 1975 (Act 63 of 1975),
has played a significant role over the judicial influence
of property valuation. The valuation profession has taken
a significant step forward since 1982, with the promulgation
of the Valuers' Act, 1982 (Act 23 of 1982), which emphasizes
the necessity of raising the standard of the valuation of
immovable property throughout the Republic of South Africa.
At the provincial level, separate ordinances, pertaining
to property valuation, exist for each province. Finally,
local authorities promulgate bylaws to regulate the property
industry.
There is an abundance of literature on the methods of
property valuation. The different methods of valuation
are the Direct Sales Comparison Method, the Income Method,
the Land Residual Method and the Cost Method. The
aforementioned Methods of valuation are particularly
suitable to the estimation of the value of vacant land,
flats, townships and schools, respectively.
The scope of the functions o f the Durban Municipality's
Estates Department has grown so vastly since 1914 that
there are ten clearly demarcated valuation zones presently.
The aforementioned Department's intricate organisational
structure, with clearly defined functions delegated to
the divisions, sections and subsections, ensure that tasks
pertaining to property valuation are concluded efficiently
and effectively.
The degree of subjectivity in the valuation of residential
properties has been drastically reduced with the introduction
of the computer at the Estates Department. The work
procedures pertaining to the drawing up of the Valuation
Roll and the functioning of the Valuation Appeal Board,
respectively, ensure efficient and effective control
in property valuation.
In the light of the aforementioned observations, the
following recommendations are made:
(i) amend the Valuers' Act, 1982 (Act 23 of 1982), to
reserve specific valuation tasks for valuers;
(ii) that the valuer should persevere in his studies on
property valuation;
(iii) that the valuer should adhere rigidly, at all
times, to the guidelines of public administration;
(iv) the designation of 'building valuer' should be
changed;
(v) the Durban City Council's rate of investment in
property should be accelerated;
(vi) the training and orientation of valuers should be
an ongoing process.
(vii) separate terms of reference should be assigned to
the Estates Department;
(viii) separate departments should be created for valuations
and estates, respectively;
(ix) a simply worded and uniform valuation ordinance
should be implemented in the Republic of South
Africa;
(x) a uniform method of valuation, for a particular type
of property, should be introduced;
(xi) land and buildings should be estimated at market
value;
(xii) the services of a full-time Senior Legal Adviser
are essential;
(xiii) the unearned increment of the capital value of
land should also be taxed;
(xiv) the frequency of valuations should increase during
periods of accelerated expansion;
(xv) a uniform rating system should be implemented
throughout the Republic of South Africa;
(xvi) the negotiation process should be used as a
cross-check to enhance the validity of valuations;
(xvii) the fees paid to the members of the Valuation
Appeal Board should be increased; and
(xviii) larger pieces of vacant land should be taxed at
a higher rate. / Thesis (MPA)-University of Durban-Westville, 1987.
|
280 |
Local Governments and Policy Responses:The Case of Shifang ProtestWang, Hejin January 2013 (has links)
Most research on Chinese protests’ outcomes focuses on aspects such as the strength, resources, and strategy choices of these protests. Although studies on Chinese contentious politics have taken great consideration of the significant role played by the state in the political process, little attention has been paid to the state itself which is actually the provider of “political opportunity”. With a state-centered perspective, this thesis examines how elite division within the authority shapes the Chinese local governments’ policy responses to popular protests. Based on a case of protest in Shifang, an environmental protest targeting the Shifang local government on its construction of a chemical plant, this study shows an elite division between the Shifang local government and the police force who were dispatched to Shifang to maintain stability by its vertical professional leadership and how this division has contributed to a successful policy outcome of this protest. To further understand the Shifang case in a larger institutional background of China’s modern political climate, this chapter provides a possible explanation that the elite division in the Shifang case is an embodiment of the structural division between Chinese local governments and the stability maintenance system which has grown into a powerful interests group as a result of the policy priority of maintaining rigid social stability in the last decade.
|
Page generated in 0.0368 seconds