共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
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Alistair Heatley 《Australian Journal of Public Administration》1985,44(2):184-193
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David Trollope 《Australian Journal of Public Administration》1988,47(2):191-194
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Alistair Heatley 《Australian Journal of Public Administration》1981,40(1):54-60
As a consequence of the constitutional development which has occurred in the Northern Territory since 1976, a veritable administrative revolution has taken place. The devolution of State-type functions from Commonwealth to local control and the legal establishment of a Northern Territory government on 1 July 1978 necessitated fundamental changes to the administrative structure. However, the pace and scale of change, so dramatic a feature of the period between 1977 and 1979, were much less pronounced in 1980 which was a year of relative stability. In political terms, the highlight of 1980 was the Legislative Assembly elections in June which resulted in the return of the Country-Liberal Party government. Its continuation in office was an important factor in ensuring a climate for administrative stability. 相似文献
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David Trollope 《Australian Journal of Public Administration》1987,46(2):247-252
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Alistair Heatley 《Australian Journal of Public Administration》1981,40(4):336-342
The period under review in this chronicle—December 1980 to mid-August 1981—was, like 1980, characterized by relative political and administrative stability and consolidation. Such a climate of stability was, of course, to be expected as the system instituted with self-government was newly established and refined. Moreover, most of the election pledges which involved significant administrative implications had been implemented in the first months of the Third Assembly. If any major alteration to administrative structure or process is to occur (and there is no present indication of such intention by the government), it is likely to take place after the budget session in August. 相似文献
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John Warhurst 《Australian Journal of Public Administration》1981,40(4):363-365
On 14 July 1980 an experiment began in Australian Federal-State relations which has been accorded little recognition. On that day the Northern Territory government opened an office in Canberra for its new "Canberra Representative". It was a step no State government had ever taken, although several had discussed such a move over the previous decade during general reconsiderations of the machinery of Federal-State relations. In particular, Sir Henry Bland's Board of Inquiry into the Victorian Public Service saw some benefits in the location in Canberra of one or more members of a proposed Commonwealth/State Relations Unit (now the Federal Affairs Division of the Premier's Department) in the State public service, although it chose finally not to recommend it 相似文献
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David Trollope 《Australian Journal of Public Administration》1986,45(2):166-170
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