Chapter 1. Introduction: Institutional Reforms, Governance and Services Delivery in the Global South
Part I: Institutional Reforms and Policy Design
Chapter 2. Governance and Policy Making in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA): Evidence from Using Inductive Thematic Coding (Tamer Qarmout & Sonia D'Angelo)
Chapter 3. The Middle Class and Institutional Reform in Selected MENA Countries (Abeer Rashdan)
Chapter 4. Deinstitutionalization and Alternative Care System: A Case Study of Children without Parental Care in Egypt (Amira H. Abdel-Aziz)
Chapter 5. Parent Maintenance Act of Bangladesh: Analysis of Its Provisions and Implementation Strategy (Nusrat Jahan Chowdhury and Touhida Tasnima)
Part II: Governance Reform
Chapter 6. Trust in Top Leadership in Africa: A Search for Explanatory Factors beyond Performance and Governance Quality (Ishtiaq Jamil and Hasan Muhammad Baniamin and Steinar Askvik)
Chapter 7. Toward E-Governance in Lebanon for Better Governance and Proactive Transparency (Sarah Hariri Baykal)
Chapter 8. Analysis of Social Accountability and Local Governance in Egypt during the Transition (Yasmin Khodary)
Part III: Service Delivery
Chapter 9. Two-Factor Model for Public-Private Partnership (PPP): Evidence from International Experiential Learning (Ali Mistarihi)
Chapter 10. Governance and Service Delivery Reform in the Post-NPM Era: The Case of Malaysia’s National Blue Ocean Strategy (Noore Alam Siddiquee)
Chapter 11. Public Service Delivery: Egypt’s Pre-University Education Reforms Continuing through the Pandemic (Laila El Baradei)
Chapter 12. Assessment of Poverty Alleviation Policies in Assiut Governorate, Egypt (Mohamed Hassan Yousef)
Chapter 13. Conclusion Institutional Reform, Governance and Service Delivery in the Global South—Issues and Perspectives (Shahjahan Bhuiyan and Hamid Ali)
Hamid E. Ali is Associate Professor of Economics and Public Policy and Dean of the School of Public Administration and Development Economics at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, Qatar, and an Associate Professor (on leave) at The American University in Cairo’s School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Egypt. He holds an M.Sc. in Economics and a PhD in Economics and Public Policy both from the University of Texas at Austin, USA, and is the author of Darfur Political Economy: A Quest for Development (2014) and co-author with Christos Kollias of Defense Spending, Natural Resources, and Conflict (2017). He has published in numerous scholarly journals.
Shahjahan Bhuiyan isAssociate Professor of Public Administration and Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies and Administration at The American University in Cairo’s School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Egypt. He was previously Dean of the KIMEP University’s College of Social Sciences, Kazakhstan. Bhuiyan holds an MPhil in Public Administration from the University of Bergen, Norway, and a PhD in Development Studies from the University of Bonn, Germany. He was a Visiting Research Fellow at Oxford University’s Oxford Institute of Population Aging (OIA) and the Inaugural Democratic Governance Fellow in UNDP’s Oslo Governance Center. He has published in numerous scholarly journals and has authored, edited, or contributed to books.
This edited book explores the link between institutional reforms, governance and services delivery in the Global South, mapping how and to what extent resource-poor governments deliver public services to their citizens. The book concludes that delivery of public services responsibly and efficiently remains largely unachievable because of weaker institutions and poor quality of governance in the Global South countries. Reforms to governance and institutions are generally considered fitting measures to overcome public service delivery challenges.
Hamid E. Ali is Associate Professor of Economics and Public Policy and Dean of the School of Public Administration and Development Economics at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, Qatar.
Shahjahan Bhuiyan isAssociate Professor of Public Administration and Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies and Administration at The American University in Cairo’s School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Egypt.