The 23rd NISPAcee Annual Conference

Conference photos available

Conference photos available

In the conference participated 317 participants

Conference programme published

Almost 250 conference participants from 36 countries participated

Conference Report

The 28th NISPAcee Annual Conference cancelled

The 29th NISPAcee Annual Conference, Ljubljana, Slovenia, October 21 - October 23, 2021

The 2020 NISPAcee On-line Conference

The 30th NISPAcee Annual Conference, Bucharest, Romania, June 2 - June 4, 2022

Perfect conference. Well organised. Very informative.

M.deV., Netherlands, 22nd Conference 2014, Hungary

Thanks to the NISPAcee Conference organisers and best wishes for the further suc cess of our common cause.

L.G., Russian Federation, 22nd Conference 2014, Hungary

The conference was well organised. I enjoyed it very much. The panels were inter esting and I enjoyed all of the events. I hope to make it to Georgia next year.

J.D., Estonia, 22nd Conference 2014, Hungary

It was a very efficiently organised conference and also very productive. I met s everal advanced scientists and discussed my project with them.

I.S., Azerbaijan, 22nd Conference 2014, Hungary

The Conference was very academically fruitful!

M. K., Republic of Macedonia, 20th Conference 2012, Republic of Macedonia

Thanks for organising the pre-conference activity. I benefited significantl y!

R. U., Uzbekistan, 19th Conference, Varna 2011

Each information I got, was received perfectly in time!

L. S., Latvia, 21st Conference 2013, Serbia

All parts of the conference were very useful. Thank you very much for the excell ent organisation of this event!

O. B., Ukraine, 19th Conference, Varna 2011

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Main Conference Theme


Government vs. Governance in Central and Eastern Europe

From Pre-Weberianism to Neo-Weberianism?


Chairs:

Polonca Kovac, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia
E-mail: polona.kovac@fu.uni-lj.si

György Gajduschek, Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary



Around the Central and Eastern European (CEE) region, the concepts of government and governance are in the spotlight. Far-reaching developments, achievements and, especially in the last few years, problems of the state and public administration are raising the basic questions of government and governance; what their role should be, what they can and cannot do, and how best to do it.

 

Governance has, over the past two decades, become an often-used term in globally as well as in our region. This alleged shift from a more traditional "government orientation” to "governance orientation” – involving, among others, an increased reliance on horizontal, market- and partnership-based state-society relations as opposed to a more hierarchy- and authority based one – has already been analysed extensively. However, the particular and common developments, opportunities and risks of the CEE countries have received less attention. In addition, the conclusions of the debate are even less clear-cut in this part of the world. Some argue that markets and, increasingly, networks provide the CEE countries with great improvement potentials that were suppressed during the previous historical epochs of state dominance. However, the voices drawing attention to the associated threats of corruption, ungovernability and even state capture – exacerbated by such factors as the weakness of formal and informal institutions of liberal democratic governance – kept on growing in number and strength over the past years.

 

The debate unfolding in the context of these tensions both in academic and policy arenas triggered several influential and new concepts and propositions regarding future (and, possibly, favourable) syntheses such as ‘New Public Governance’, ‘post-NPM’, or the ‘Neo-Weberian State’. The practical relevance of such alternatives to governance has increased over the past few years, and especially since the outbreak of the present economic and financial crisis. It seems that the state is, in an increasing number of CEE countries and to an increasing extent, ‘back in’ once again.

 

In 2014, re-visiting the propositions, products and prospects of Neo-Weberian approaches is especially timely because this year, we celebrate the 150th anniversary of the birth of Max Weber. Here, again, we confront a number of questions. Many of these are similar to those appearing in other regions of Europe, such as the challenges and possibly diverse outcomes related to imbuing Weberian bureaucracies with an outward-looking and proactive orientation or to tackling increasingly ‘wicked’ and globalized policy issues using hierarchy-based philosophies and instruments. However, here again, a number of issues more pressing, or even more idiosyncratic, appear on CEE countries’ horizon. The sources of these challenges are in many respects similar to those that appeared in relation to the government vs. governance debate. However, several additional ones deserve further attention, which in the final analysis might come down to the malleability of classical Weberian virtues of public administration and the continued existence, possibly even dominance, of pre-Weberian ethos, culture and practices – sometimes even institutions – of public governance.

 

Thus academics and practitioners interested in, or facing, public administration and governance-related problems of the CEE countries encounter an intriguing array of questions and issues. To mention but a few:

 
  • What values and priorities should govern thinking and action related to tackling problems of government and governance?

  • To what extent and how should autonomous and non-state actors such as civil society organisations be empowered and relied upon in building sound and effective government?
  • What types of legal modernization are required by governance?
  • What is the optimal relationship between hierarchical, market-based, and network forms of organization?
  • Is it possible to establish Weberian public administration and to create modern management systems at the same time? Is the implementation of them necessarily a sequential process?
  • What is the influence of e-governance and social networks on this process? Is there such a thing as e-Weberianism, or Weberianism 2.0?