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Government Communication in New Zealand : Changing Roles and Conventions
thesis
posted on 2021-11-12, 12:21 authored by Urlich, Judith MayA brief study of democratic theory as it relates to public participation and government communications within a New Zealand context. A literature review identifies the traditional communications conventions pre-state sector reform and a survey of state sector communications managers reveals the conflict between this traditional approach as it is articulated, and actual practice in the post-state sector reform environment. A new convention is presented based on three divisions within the core public service: primarily policy; primarily operational; and mixed objective. Communications conventions for state-owned enterprises, Crown entities and Crown research institutes are also identified.
History
Copyright Date
2005-01-01Date of Award
2005-01-01Publisher
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of WellingtonRights License
Author Retains CopyrightDegree Discipline
Public PolicyDegree Grantor
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of WellingtonDegree Level
MastersDegree Name
Master of Public PolicyVictoria University of Wellington Item Type
Awarded Research Masters ThesisLanguage
en_NZVictoria University of Wellington School
School of GovernmentAdvisors
Martin, JohnUsage metrics
Keywords
GovernmentCommunicationsConventionsSchool: School of Government160599 Policy and Administration not elsewhere classifiedMarsden: 360299 Policy and Administration not Elsewhere ClassifiedDegree Discipline: Public PolicyDegree Level: MastersDegree Name: Master of Public PolicyPolicy and Administration not elsewhere classified
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