Caught in the Act: The Smoking Gun View of Ministerial Responsibility |
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Authors: | Elaine Thompson,& Greg Tillotsen |
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Affiliation: | Politics School, University of New South Wales,;Parliamentary Library, New South Wales Parliament |
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Abstract: | While any discussion of ministerial responsibility must in part focus on ministerial resignations, finding out when ministers resign is only the tip of the iceberg. A full assessment of ministerial responsibility would look at the relations between ministers and their senior bureaucrats, as discussed in Bill Blick’s article. It would look at the impact of managerialism on ministerial accountability, especially in the light of privatisation and contracting out. It would assess the impact of other mechanisms of accountability, including the senate. The subject of this article must always be put into a broader context. This article concentrates on ministerial resignations drawing on evidence from Britain, Canada, the federal government in Australia and the government of New South Wales. When do ministers resign? |
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