An outline version of the course structure is shown below:
Unit | Title | Weeks | Assessment activity (end of unit) |
1 | Public sector management: theoretical perspectives and research methodology | 4 | |
2 | Strategic planning and management in the public sector | 5 | Assignment 1 |
3 | Reinventing government: governance in the new millennium | 4 | |
4 | Globalization and public sector management | 4 | Assignment 2 |
5 | Leadership and crisis management | 4 | |
6 | Values, ethics, accountability and trust in public sector management | 4 | Assignment 3 |
7 | New forms of governance I: public-private partnership | 4 | Assignment 4 |
8 | New forms of governance II: Intra- and inter- governmental components of public sector management | 4 | |
| Revision | 3 | Assignment 5 |
| Total | 36 | |
The study units summarize key issues, explain the relevant concepts and examples, and comment on related readings. Each unit contains activities to reinforce your learning of the issues under discussion. Moreover, the assignments provide you with further feedback and help you achieve the learning outcomes of the course.
The course is structured so that each unit builds on previous units. Each unit contains a variety of techniques to help you study. The following points will help you to get the most out of the information presented:
- Read each study unit carefully. This is like paying attention throughout a whole lecture.
- Use the unit guide to help direct you in what to read and when to read it.
- Test your comprehension and analytical skills by working through the activities that appear in the units. Don't skip ahead to find the answers ¾ you will learn better by doing the thinking yourself.
- Complete the assignments on time.
- Check out the other sources of information referred to in the units. These other sources might include websites, videos, and so on.
Each unit has specific subject matter, activities and a summary of the materials covered.
Unit 1 Public sector management: theoretical perspectives and research methodology
This unit looks at major theories (both classical and contemporary) in public sector management. It examines the philosophical underpinnings of various theories of public sector management. This unit serves as the foundation of this course — it equips you with the necessary knowledge of public sector management to study issues pertinent to today's public sector management. Furthermore, to enable you to understand and research issues in public sector management on your own, this unit also introduces you to research methods in public administration.
Unit 2 Strategic planning and management in the public sector
Unit 2 starts with a comprehensive examination of the environmental forces that prompt public organizations to use strategic planning to manage the public sector. Next, the unit discusses what strategic planning and management in the public sector mean and how they are different from that in the private sector. Towards the end of this unit, a critical examination of the strategic planning approach to the management of the public sector is provided in the context of Hong Kong, focusing on how strategic planning and management can serve to improve the public sector's performance and whether public sector strategic planning and management has any staying power or is simply a management fad imported from the private sector.
Unit 3 Reinventing government: governance in the new millennium
This unit examines how public managers in advanced Western democracies, mainly the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand, are reinventing their governments. The unit first examines the concept of governance and governance problems in the new millennium. Following that is an investigation into different forms of reinventing government — reinventing, deregulating, reengineering, privatizing, and electronic government. Afterwards, the unit assesses if reinventing government is an answer to the governance problems in the new millennium. The unit concludes with an evaluation of the relevance of the overseas reinventing government experience to the operation of the Hong Kong public sector.
Unit 4 Globalization and public sector management
Unit 4 starts with a clarification of the meaning of the term 'globalization', a commonly known but not very well understood term. The unit then goes on to examine factors that contribute to the rise of globalization, and the probable merits and demerits of globalization. It is difficult for any nation-state to be immunized from the effects of globalization. How states are affected by globalization, and how they respond to the trend in globalization, are examined thoroughly in this unit. The unit concludes by examining the effects of globalization on Hong Kong's public sector management. You also study the roles that China plays in helping Hong Kong meet the challenges of globalization. References are made to the Closer Economic Partnership Agreements and the Hong Kong-Pearl River Delta relationship.
Unit 5 Leadership and crisis management
This unit discusses the role of leadership in public sector management, especially during crises. This unit investigates the role and importance of leaders in public organizations. It also reviews the various approaches to studying leadership. Leadership styles must be changed in different situations in order to fit the circumstances and resources available. The role of leaders is also crucial in crisis management. The second half of this unit therefore looks at the different leadership styles in different circumstances, especially during crises.
Unit 6 Values, ethics, accountability and trust in public sector management
Effective governance depends on the trust that citizens place in their government. At the same time, citizens expect public officials to behave ethically and to be accountable for their actions. Ethics and accountability of public officials in turn depends on the core values that they hold. This demonstrates the interrelationship among trust, ethics, accountability and values. This unit aims to introduce you to the concepts and theories of values, ethics, accountability and trust in the public sector. Specific issues to be addressed include: Why should ethics be studied in public sector management? What is social justice/equity? Are there any inherent conflicts between efficiency and social equity? If so, how can they be redressed? What is trust in government? How can it be enhanced? What are the implications of values, ethics, accountability, and trust for public sector management?
Unit 7 New forms of governance I: public-private partnership
Unit 7 first introduces you to the various tools of government. Next, it focuses on 'partnership' — a tool of government that has emerged in the past few decades and has been adopted in Hong Kong in recent years. Following that is a discussion of the possible modes of partnership among the government, the non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the private sector. Advantages and problems of partnership, and ways to facilitate the formation and the continuance of public-private partnership are also examined in great detail. Case studies of Hong Kong's health services and social welfare are presented to enhance your understanding of this particular tool of government.
Unit 8 New forms of governance II: Intra- and inter-governmental components of public sector management
Intra-governmental relationships are horizontal relationships between departments of a government or vertical relationships between the hierarchies of a government, and may even extend to the relationships among the executive, legislative and judicial branches of a government. Inter-governmental relationships are between different governments within a state, e.g. between local governments or between the local government and central government. This unit looks at the concept of decentralization, devolution and delegation as tools of inter- and intra-governmental governance in the context of public sector management. It reviews the experiences drawn from overseas countries and discusses a local application: the possible effects of growing intergovernmental activities between the HKSAR and mainland China on the autonomy of the former and on local public sector management.