Thus far I have ten reviews of my book in academic journals. All have been positive and all help me think about improving my work in the next book. Here are some highlights in the first of a few blog posts:
Richard Allen from the IMF wrote in the International Public Management Review:
"Matt Andrews has written a timely and important book that crystallizes thinking he and others have been developing over several years, and is underpinned by rigorous theoretical and empirical analysis. It is to be hoped that the lessons of the book will not be lost on the governments of developing nations, and more especially on agencies such as the World Bank, who need to adjust their development models to reflect the radically new approach to reform set out in the book. Andrews uses vivid language and colorful examples to highlight his important messages, and make them relevant to practitioners as well as scholars. The book deserves a wide readership."
Julien Barbara reviewed the book for the Australian Journal of Public Administration:
" As a former development practitioner managing the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Island’s Machinery of Government program, charged with responsibility for helping the Solomon Islands Government to strengthen key governance institutions such as its electoral and accountability institutions, I found Matt Andrews’ The Limits of Institutional Reform in Development an important and insightful contribution for those concerned with institutional reform in the region."
Julien also challenged the idea of PDIA in a manner that I have found very helpful:
" Is PDIA more or less viable in different types of contexts? The institutional reform challenges facing Solomon Islands as a small, post-conflict fragile state will be very different from those facing dynamic Asian economies such as Vietnam or China. Is a modicum of institutional functionality required as a starting point? What about highly politicised and contested political environments? Does PDIA work better for some institutional reforms than others and why?"
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