Unit 2

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UNIT 2:THE THEORY AND

REALITY OF
ADMINISTRATION

Lecturer: Dr. Sachin COOTHOOPERMAL

Dr. Sachin COOTHOOPERMAL 1


INTRODUCTION

• Administration is a function of political systems


• Political systems vary from country to country and affect each administration
differently based on type of political structure of the country
• Structures in terms of constitutions, legislatures, and federal systems of government

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BASIC CONCEPTS
• Plurality-majority (first past the post) electoral system: Individual candidates who win the most
votes in a constituency are elected. This is a “winner takes all” electoral system, whereby a
winner in a constituency with multiple candidates may not receive a majority of votes.
• Proportional representation electoral system: A list of candidates from a party is presented to
run in a constituency; the number of “winning” candidates from that list is in direct proportion to
the number of votes cast for that party in that constituency.
• Federalism: A political system whereby the constitution divides power between levels of
government. laws are divided between the central government and state, provincial, or
territorial governments. The use of a federal system is usually a reflection of a political
community that promotes a certain understanding of the role of the state, or seeks to
accommodate the needs of diverse groups, especially if these groups are spread over a large
land mass.
• Unitary: The central (national) government has a monopoly of power; it delegates power to
lower levels of government.
• Social capital: the networks of relationships among people who live and work in a particular
society, enabling that society to function effectively.
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Dr. Sachin COOTHOOPERMAL


THE ORGANISATIONAL AND POLITICAL
CONTEXT OF AN ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM:
THE CONSTITUTION
• A country’s constitution defines a country’s political and legal structure; it defines the
country’s law making body, or legislature.
• A constitution stipulates the basic powers of the legislature and its relationship to other
state organs and political institutions e.g. Mauritius where the national assembly has
supreme constitutional powers and determines the functioning of various constitutional
institutions of the country like the president, the government , and the opposition
• The constitution is a statement of the legal relationship between citizens and their
governments
• Serves a symbolic function, as in the United States, where it has become the object of
loyalty.

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THE ORGANISATIONAL AND POLITICAL
CONTEXT OF AN ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM:
THE CONSTITUTION
• A constitution directly affects the work of legislatures by describing:
a) whether the legislature is unitary or federal;
b) the role of the chief executive in relation to the legislature(parliamentary versus
presidential);
c) the electoral process for representation in a parliament and the structure of parliament,
for example if legislative chambers are unicameral (one-chamber or house like
Mauritius) or bicameral (two-chambers or houses) e.g. Canada, UK, US, and Australia;
and
d) the type of political party or alternate system that is encouraged through electoral
design or established by law.

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THE ORGANISATIONAL AND POLITICAL
CONTEXT OF AN ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM:
THE CONSTITUTION
• Elements Common to written constitutions:
a) A preamble introducing the country’s constitution;
b) A description of division of powers or a system of checks and balances within and among the
nations governing institutions;
c) A description of the structure of governing institutions which includes the constitutional
obligations of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches, as well as other political
involvement such as the monarchy or military, of government;
d) An outline for selecting government officials through a political party system or alternate system;
e) A statement of fundamental rights and freedoms to be held by individuals; and
f) An outline of circumstances and protocol for amending, revising, and suspending the constitution.

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THE ORGANISATIONAL AND POLITICAL
CONTEXT OF AN ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM:
THE CONSTITUTION
• There are other systems of non written constitutions like Britain where we are guided
by legislature Acts
• In countries that are not primarily based on political competition like in some
countries of the Arab World where the Islamic code of law or Shari’ah often serves as
the foundation for the country’s legal system e.g. in Sauda Arabia
• Some constitutions, like that of the USA, can provide a statement of fundamental rights
and freedoms of their citizens. As a statement of shared values, these constitutions
can become important national symbols.

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CONSTITUTIONAL ENGINEERING (REFORMS)
• The creation or amendment of constitutions to ensure the future success of a governing system
• Because constitutions are so fundamental, constitutional reforms include such measures as changes
to the electoral process, or changes to government structures to more effectively represent regional,
ethnic, or other minority interests in pluralistic or divided societies
• Some examples:
1. reforming electoral systems to encourage or discourage smaller parties with an ethnic base, or
developing quotas for their representation within government and legislature;
2. Creating a federal system which allows for some regional or local autonomy;
3. designing political systems to limit instability or deadlock between executive and legislature (for
example presidential powers versus parliamentary powers);
4. creating a system of rights protection,
5. transforming an informal constitution into a formal one, such as the final step toward sovereignty
that Canada took when it passed the Constitution Act 1982.
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THE ORGANISATIONAL AND POLITICAL
CONTEXT OF AN ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM:
THE LEGISLATURE
• Legislatures are representative assemblies empowered to enact statute law.
• Legislatures represent the process for collective decision making over the passage of legislation
• Representative democracy. They are also more diverse in their memberships; they are often
designed to represent various groups or regions.
• Legislatures are often the branch of government in which popular complaints, dissatisfactions, and
demands for action are first articulated.
• The process of law making can be difficult and usually requires that the differences in public
preferences as stated by various representatives are reconciled.
• Committee systems provide forums for different groups to express their differences, as well as
environments that foster compromise and decision.

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THE ORGANISATIONAL AND POLITICAL
CONTEXT OF AN ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM:
THE LEGISLATURE
• Although all legislatures seem to perform the same functions and operate the same way, there are many
variations in the structure and the relationships between the various departments and arms of the
legislature.
• the behaviours of representatives are influenced by a number of variables including
1. their own personal motivations and how they view their role;
2. They may be personally motivated by the desire: to be re-elected or selected for other positions; to
influence policy; to wield power in the legislative body; and to attain private gain.
3. Representatives’ behaviour is also influenced by what they conceive their role in the legislature to be.
• The two most commonly cited conceptions of their role(s) are:
A. the Madisonian/Delegate model where the legislative representative reflects and communicates
constituency attitudes
B. the Burkean/Trustee model where the legislative representative uses his or her best judgment to
determine what is in the best interest of his or her constituency.

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ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

1. Plurality-Majority Also known as “first past the post,” plurality-majority is a system


where one candidate from each political party stands for election
2. Proportional representation In a proportional representation system, voters cast their
ballots for a party, not a particular candidate. The number of legislators elected from the
party is determined by the percentage of the total vote a political party receives. Parties
fill the seats by selecting candidates from a predetermined list (which are ordered in
terms of the party’s preference of who it would like to see elected).
3. Semi-proportional representation This system is a combination of the plurality-majority
and proportional systems. Often a system would be said to be semi-proportional in
bicameral (two chamber) systems, where one house may be elected by plurality-
majority while the other house be selected by proportional representation.

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ELECTORAL CHAMBER
• Historically, two chamber or bicameral legislative systems emerged from the Monarchy system in
the United Kingdom and other European countries where there was a need to represent the views
and interests of both the aristocracy and the common person
• Bicameral legislatures have two-chambers, often termed the lower house and the upper house. In
the lower house, each member represents the same number of citizens in each district or region so
that the population is proportionally represented. In the upper house, the way in which members are
selected varies. Members to this house may inherit the seat, be appointed by other bodies, or be
elected either directly or indirectly to the post. Bicameral systems tend to occur in federal states,
because of the two-tiered power-structure.
• In strong federal systems, state or local governments have the ability to raise their own revenue, and
the national executive and legislature have corresponding weaker powers
• For public administrators working in federal systems, the ability to implement policy in a particular
area is limited by whether or not that area falls within their government’s (national or subnational)
jurisdiction.

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DIVISION OF POWER BETWEEN BRANCHES
OF GOVERNMENT
• Different branches of government e.g. executive branch, legislative branch, judiciary branch
• The structure of a country’s political system will affect the relations between the legislature and the
executive, between the public and their representatives, and among the representatives themselves.
• Each country has its own variety of one of three political systems, presidential, parliamentary, or
hybrid, and corresponding difference in the relations between the executive and legislative power.
• Presidential systems - In presidential systems, both political and administrative powers are divided
among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches E.G. U.S.
• Parliamentary systems - Parliament is sovereign and executive authority (the Prime Minister and
Cabinet) is derived from the legislature e.g. UK
• Hybrid systems (e.g. France) - executive power is shared between the President and a Prime
Minister, both of whom are separately elected from the legislature.

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DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE THREE
POLITICAL SYSTEMS
1. The separation of powers or, the extent to which the powers of government are
separated functionally between branches and the power (or lack of) of one branch
over another. Among the three political systems the competition for control and
capacity to introduce legislation varies considerably.
2. The conditions for removal of executive from office.
3. The structure of legislative parties and leadership (i.e., party discipline).
4. Each political system carries out the legislative function of creating legislation in
slightly different ways

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THE CULTURAL CONTEXT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SYSTEMS
• What is Culture?
• Bowornwathana (2007, p.276) describes governmental culture as:
“...the human creation and use of symbols and artefacts in government. It is the way of life of the entire
government, covering code of manners, dress, language rituals, norms of behaviour, and system of
belief. Governmental culture is a product of history. Since human beings are both acted upon by
culture and act back, new cultural forms and meanings are formed. So the culture of government in a
particular country changes alongside changes in the political, economic, and social organizations of
society and the global community”
• 3 different roles of culture: As the independent variable, governmental culture affects the outcomes
of reform efforts. As the dependent variable, governmental culture changes as a result of
governance reforms. Finally, as an intervening variable, governmental culture can obstruct the
success of reforms
• One of the difficulties of studying the role of culture in policy implementation is that culture is
difficult to define and to test.

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CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT
• A major focus for those concerned about good governance and democracy is the strength of the
connection between the governors (the state) and those being governed (citizens), and, the strength
of connections among those within civil society
• “social capital” refers to the connections between people that comes from their interactions in
voluntary organisations such as churches, service organisations, or clubs
• social capital can be unevenly distributed, and can serve to exclude as well as include
• If social capital is to be the glue that holds society together, its networks must create tolerance by
cross cutting religious, ethnic, or class divides
• Civic participation and trust in government has long been argued to be important to healthy
democracies
• Institutions as the World Bank now recognise social capital as the “missing link” for successfully
dealing with intractable problems such as global poverty
• Social capital is not just the aggregation of social networks; it is a category of non-financial
“resources” such as “trust” produced by these networks that facilitate both economic development
as well as political participation.
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PUBLIC POLICY PROCESS

1. Agenda setting. This stage is where the problem is identified, defined, and ranked
in terms of priorities. This stage is political: it involves non-state actors as well as
the state.
2. Policy formulation. This stage is where the goal of the policy is identified, the
instrument is selected, the policy is designed, and the policy is approved. It
involves mostly politicians and bureaucrats, but non state actors are involved
depending on their level of interest and expertise.
3. Policy implementation. This stage involves putting the policy “into action” and then
evaluating its effectiveness. Bureaucrats are the primary actors at this stage.

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THANK YOU

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