My friend Matt Crowley took this great picture of my book in his recycling bin.
Thankfully the book is not just being recycled. Chris Pollitt from Erasmus had the following to say about it in the review in the International Review of Administrative Sciences:"The author uses both ‘big picture’ statistics of World Bank and other interventions, and detailed case studies in particular countries and sectors to show that, time and time again, the positive
effects of western-style reforms are either negligible or short-lived. Implementation gaps are routinely huge."
"Andrews does not rest with critique.Commendably, he also wants to outline a better way. He sets out what he terms Problem-Driven Iterative Adaptation, and finds some examples from the field to show that it is already sometimes possible. PDIA begins with the diagnosis of particular problems, understood as existing in specific contexts. It encourages the articulation of largely home-grown solutions rather than reaching for international best practices. It seeks to broaden the cast of actors commonly involved in such reforms, so as to incorporate more context-rich local knowledge, and also so as to improve local ownership."
"Finally, one might remark that, although this book is focussed on the developing world, much of the critique can be applied, albeit in diluted form, to many developed countries. Consider the innumerable ‘best practice’ reforms apparently adopted by/pressed upon the CEE countries while they were candidates for EU membership. Or the activities of the influential OECD public management/governance section, collecting and dispensing benchmarks and best practice, usually with precious little in the way of contextual information or analysis (OECD, 2011). Or even the UK government – signalling itself as a flagship of public management reform by repeatedly re-jigging the same institutions, apparently on the basis of very little good evidence. Perhaps a more modest, adaptive, locally-informed, context sensitive approach to public management reform would be of benefit to the developed world too?"
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