Cet ouvrage vise à donner la parole à ceux qui ont fait, font et feront l’Administration publique en Europe et plus particulièrement, sous l’angle de vue du GEAP.  Construire le domaine de l’Administration publique en Europe en tant que discipline est une histoire complexe de ressources, de langues, d’institutions, de collaborations, de plateformes, de visions, d’interactions avec la pratique, etc. Cet ouvrage n’emprunte pas la perspective historique classique qui raconte 35 ans d’histoire mais offre une perspective sur le futur en tenant compte du présent et du passé. L’objectif est de donner une perspective sur le futur, de motiver la prochaine génération de chercheurs et professeurs en Administration publique et de lancer un débat sur son avenir.
 
Les articles liés ci-dessous sont originellement publiés en français et nous vous en offrons la traduction en anglais sur ce site. 
 

TABLE DES MATIÈRES - Téléchargez en PDF

Introduction, by Geert Bouckaert, EGPA President, 2004-2010

“The Speyer Conference” : Some origins of EGPA/GEAP before 1975, by Stefan Fisch, Rector of the German University of Administrative Sciences Rektor der Deutschen Hochschule für Verwaltungswissenschaften Speyer .

1 «Rough Guides » in PA-Land

1.1. – Dialogues of disciplines: What should and could the PA-field learn from disciplines .
1.2. – How will Supply and Demand of PA-Ideas match in the Future: Journals and Organisations in PA-Land 
1.2.1. – Christopher Pollitt – Editor in Chief – IRAS
1.2.2. – Rod Rhodes – Public Administration
1.2.3. – Jos Raadschelders – Public Administration Review (PAR)
1.2.4. – Fabrice Larat – Revue française d’Administration publique:
LA RFAP – Trois décennies de travail éditorial au service de l’étude de
l’administration en France et dans le monde
1.2.5. – Kuno Schedler – International Public Management Network
1.2.6. – Stephen Osborne – International Research Society of Public Management
1.2.7. – Gyorgy Jenei – Making Sound and Solid the System of Democracy in the New EU Member CEE Countries
1.2.8. – Ludmila Gajdosova – The Network of Institutes and Schools of Public Administration in Central and Eastern Europe (NISPAcee)

1.3. – Where you stand is where you sit: What is the impact of institutional embeddednesses for PA?
1.3.1. – Helmut K. Anheier – Hertie School of Governance, Berlin, Germany.
1.3.2. – Giovanni Valloti – Universita di Bocconi, Milan, Italy
1.3.3. – Stavros Zouridis – University of Tilburg, The Netherlands 
1.3.4. – Per Laegreid – Bergen, Norway
1.3.5. – Jean-Michel Eymeri-Douzans – IEP Toulouse, France

1.4. – Who will shape our future elites?
1.4.1. – Bernard Boucault, ENA, France
1.4.2. – Calin Hintea, Babes Bolyai, Cluj – Romania
1.4.3. – Paul H.A. Frissen, NSOB – The Netherlands
1.4.4. – Théo van der Krogt, EAPAA Secretary General
1.4.5. – Paul Joyce – New Thinking in the UK on University Education forPublic Services Leaders

1.5. – Who pays the piper, calls the tune: About commissioning and organising research in PA
1.5.1. – Mark Bovens, Utrecht, The Netherlands
1.5.2. – Geert Bouckaert – Future trends in organising research in PA

2 Cultural Diversity in PA-Land


2.1. – Babel@PA: Saved in translation or How the PA-field is affected by the language in which it is conducted?

2.1.1. – German PA and PA in German – Klaus König, Speyer
2.1.2. – French PA and PA in French – Gérard Timsit, Paris
2.1.3. – Dutch PA and PA in Dutch – Walter Kickert, Erasmus UniversityRotterdam
2.1.4. – English PA and PA in English – Gavin Drewry, Portsmouth
2.1.5. – Finnish PA and PA in Finnish – Turo Virtanen, Helsinki
2.1.6. – Hungarian PA and PA in Hungarian – Lajos Lörincz, Budapest
2.1.7. – Spanish PA and PA in Spanish – Salvador Parado-Diez, Madrid
2.1.8. – Italian PA and PA in Italian – Marco Meneguzzo and Denita Cepiku, Roma
2.1.9. – Estonian PA and PA in Estonian – Rainer Kattel and Tiina Randma-Liiv, Tallinn
2.1.10. – Polish PA and PA in Polish – Barbara Kudrycka and Marek Wierzbowski, Warsaw
2.1.11. – Lithuanian PA and PA in Lithuanian – Vitalis Nakrošis, Vilnius
2.1.12. – Romanian PA and PA in Romanian – Lucica Matei and Ani Matei, Bucharest 
2.1.13. – Slovak PA and PA in Slovak – Juraj Nemec, Banska Brystrica
2.1.14. – Greek PA and PA in Greek – Calliope Spanou, Athens
2.1.15. – Portuguese PA and PA in Portuguese – Silvia Mendes and Pedro Camoes, Minho
2.1.16. – Maltese PA and PA in Maltese – Emanuel Camilleri, Valetta
2.1.17. – Danish PA and PA in Danish – Torben Beck Jorgensen, Copenhagen
2.1.18. – Czech PA and PA in Czech – Sonia Skulova, Praha
2.1.19. – Slovenian PA and PA in Slovenian – Stanka Setnikar-Cankar, Ljjubljana.

2.2. – The field of PA as a dialogue of Institutions and Individuals

2.2.1. – TAD: Transatlantic Dialogues between ASPA and EGPA – Taco Brandsen, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
2.2.2. – TED: TransEuropean Dialogues between NISPAcee and EGPA – Wolfgang Drechsler, University of Tallinn, Estonia
2.2.3. – MED: Dialogue Euro Méditerranéen de Management Public – Robert Fouchet, IMPGT, Université Paul Cézanne, Aix-Marseille III, France
2.2.4. – Moving from Switzerland to Germany: Isabella Proeller, University of Potsdam, Germany
2.2.5. – Moving from Belgium to the UK and the Netherlands: Steven Van de Walle, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
2.2.6. – Moving from England to the European Continent – Christopher Pollitt, KULeuven, Belgium
2.2.7. – Moving from France to Italy – Jacques Ziller, University of Pavia, Italy

2.3. – EGPA and its Permanent Study Groups

2.3.1. – E-Gov – Frank Bannister and Albert Meijer
2.3.2. – Performance in Public Sector – Steven van de Walle, Wouter van
Dooren, Kai Wegrich
2.3.3. – Personnel Policies – David Farnham, Peter Leisink, Annie Hondeghem, Sylvia Horton, Lotte Bogh Anderson and Wouter Vandenabeele
2.3.4. – Local Governance – Marcel Boogers, Tomas Bergström, Jochen Franzke, Linze Schaap, Colin Copus, Jose Manuel Ruano de la Fuente 
2.3.5. – Intergovernmental Relations – Edoardo Ongaro, Andrew Massey, Ellen Wayenberg
2.3.6. – Governance of Public Sector Organisation – Werner Jann, Per Lagreid, Koen Verhoest
2.3.7. – Ethics and Integrity of Governance – Jeroen Maesschalk, Leo Huberts
2.3.8. – Public Governance of Societal Sectors – Taco Brandsen, Willem Trommel, Bram Verschuren
2.3.9. – Public Administration and Teaching – Christoph Reichard, Arthur Ringeling
2.3.10. – Public Administration and Law – Philip Langbroek, Hélène Pauliat, François Lafarge.
2.3.11. – Strategic Management in Government – Robert Fouchet, Paul Joyce
2.3.12. – Public Policy – Harald Saetren, Peter Hupe
2.3.13. – EU Administration and Multi Level Governance – Edoardo Ongaro, Andrew Massey, Michael W. Bauer

Young, younger, youngest: PA as a story of generations

The previous short texts are separated by testimonies from a range of young to less young people, from starters to emeriti, from front line to establishment, across Europe. Each of the above mentioned persons will be introduced by mentioning their main position, and also by answering three questions.
The three questions are:
– Why are you a researcher/teacher in the field of PA?
– What impact do you want your work to have? What difference do you/did you want
to make?
– If PA would not exist, why should we invent it (or not)?


 

3 Some Conclusions for the future of Public Administration in Europe

Geert Bouckaert, Public Management Institute KULeuven, Belgium and
Wim Van De Donk, EGPA Vice President
PA: What can we know?
PA: What should we do?
PA: What may we believe?

APPENDIX : 35 years of EGPA: facts and figures

1. EGPA in brief
2. Questionnaire
3. List of Presidents
4. List of Conferences