International Review of Administrative Sciences
Public Policy & Public Administration
International Review of Administrative Sciences (IRAS ) is an international peer-reviewed journal devoted to academic and professional public administration. Founded in 1927 it is the oldest scholarly public administration journal specifically focused on comparative and international topics. IRAS seeks to shape the future agenda of public administration around the world by encouraging reflection on international comparisons, new techniques and approaches, the dialogue between academics and practitioners, and debates about the future of the field itself.
IRAS is the official journal of the International Institute of Administrative Sciences (IIAS), the European Group of Public Administration (EGPA) and the International Association of Schools and Institutes of Administration (IASIA). IRAS is published in three different language editions - English, French and Chinese.
"As the global village is evolving understanding the diversity of national perspectives on a growing variety of issues is an essential necessity, not a luxury. The careful selection of topics and articles in the International Review of Administrative Sciences provides a wealth of information for developing such understanding and meeting the needs of practitioners and academics." Arie Halachmi, Institute of Government at Tennessee State University, USA and Zhongshan University, China
"I have been doing research and editing in comparative public administration for the last twenty five years. I have always found the International Review of Administrative Sciences indispensable reading. It provides us with articles containing glimpses of new theoretical thinking, but also with accounts of best practices introduced by governments around the world." Ignacio Pichardo, Former President of IIAS, El Colegio Mexiquense
"International Review of Administrative Sciences offers thought-provoking contributions from both scholars and practitioners on a wide variety of topics related to international and comparative administration. Few journals can match IRAS in presenting timely analysis, dialogue, and debate on administrative issues from the industrialized countries of the global North, both in Europe and the Americas, and from the developing and transitioning nations of the global South." Derick W. Brinkerhoff, RTI Senior Fellow in International Public Management Research Triangle Institute
This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)
All issues of International Review of Administrative Sciences are available to browse online.
Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/iras
International Review of Administrative Sciences is an international peer-reviewed journal devoted to academic and professional public administration. Founded in 1927 it is the oldest scholarly public administration journal specifically focused on comparative and international topics. IRAS seeks to shape the future agenda of public administration around the world by encouraging reflection on international comparisons, new techniques and approaches, the dialogue between academics and practitioners, and debates about the future of the field itself.
IRAS is the official journal of the International Institute of Administrative Sciences (IIAS), the European Group of Public Administration (EGPA) and the International Association of Schools and Institutes of Administration (IASIA). IRAS is published in four different language editions – English, French, Spanish and Chinese.
The IIAS exists to advance the study and practice of public administration and public management. It operates at a global level and is funded by states world-wide; but is independent of any of them and, through its links with the United Nations, seeks to develop a voice and vision that is neutral, as objective as possible and grounded in the exigency of the fact. Although it has existed for over seventy years (since 1930), the Institute's focus is on the present and the future. How governance is done and how it could be done better; how the law of administration applies and how it might be applied more correctly; and how the management of public affairs is conducted and how it might be done best - all of these reflect its activities. Accountability is a core value for the institute. Those who exercise authority must account for its use to those on whose behalf they use it. Public Administration is the key activity that connects between the power-holders and the citizen. We believe it should be effective, efficient and economical in its execution of the duties and rights of the state. We support modern governance and proper public administration and believe these should be carried out in a way that actively acknowledges diversity, that is respectful of identity and serious belief and that reflects balance.
Sabine Kuhlmann | Potsdam University, Germany |
Manuel Pedro Rodríguez Bolívar | Universidad de Granada, Spain |
Ricardo Correa Gomes | FGV São Paulo School of Business Administration, Brazil |
Gene Brewer | University of Georgia, USA |
Shamsul Haque | National University of Singapore, Singapore |
Martial Pasquier | Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration, Lausanne, Switzerland |
Renate Reiter | FernUniversität in Hagen, Germany |
Christina Andrews | Federal University of Sco Paulo UNIFESP, Brazil |
Evan Berman | Fundação Getulio Vargas, Brazil |
Jörg Bogumil | Chairperson of the IIAS Finance Committee, Belgium |
Jacques Bourgault | ENAP - National School of Public Administration, Canada |
Derick W Brinkerhoff | RTI - Research Triangle Institute International,USA |
Robert Cameron | University of Cape Town, South Africa |
David Carassus | Université de Pau et des Pays de l’Adour, France |
Christoph Demmke | Potsdam University, Germany |
Jean-Michel Eymeri Douzans | University of Toulose, France |
Gavin Drewry | Royal Holloway University, UK |
Mauricio Ivan Dussauge-Laguna | Centro de Investigacion y Docencias Economicas (CIDE), Mexico |
Patrice Dutil | Ryerson University, Canada |
Alain Eraly | Free University of Brussels, Belgium |
Isabelle Fortier | ENAP - National School of Public Administration, Canada |
Francesca Gains | University of Manchester, UK |
David Giauque | Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration, Switzerland |
Sharon Gilad | Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel |
Marcel Guenoun | Ministry of Economy and Finance, France |
Gyorgy Hajnal | Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary |
Gerhard Hammerschmid | Hertie School of Governance, Germany |
Nikolaos-Komninos Hlepas | National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece |
Yijia Jing | Fudan University, China |
Paul Joyce | Liverpool John Moores University, UK |
Masao Kikuchi | Meiji University, Tokyo, Japan |
Toshiya Kitayama | Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan |
Kilkon Ko | Seoul National University, Korea |
Yoshiko Kuni | Tokyo Gabugei University, Japan |
Wai-Fung Lam | University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China |
Eliza W.Y. Lee | University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China |
Elke Löffler | Governance International, UK |
Michael Mannin | Liverpool John Moores University, UK |
Andrew Massey | International School for Government, Kings College London, UK |
Albert J. Meijer | Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands |
M. Jae Moon | Yonsei University, South Korea |
Gedeon M. Mudacumura | Cheyney University of Pennsylvania, USA |
Carmen Navarro | University Autonoma of Madrid, Spain |
Juraj Nemec | Masaryk University Brno, Czech Republic |
Sue Newberry | University of Sydney,Australia |
Bamidele Olowu | Africa Europe Foundation, Netherlands |
SoonAe Park | Seoul National University, South Korea |
François Pichault | University of Liège, Belgium |
Isabella Proeller | University of Potsdam, Germany |
Pierre-Charles Pupion | University of Poitiers, France |
John S. T. Quah | National University of Singapore (NUS), Singapore |
Adrian Ritz | University of Berne, Switzerland |
Christian Rouillard | University of Ottawa, Canada |
Seriye Sezen | TODAIE, Turkey |
Ed Stazyk | Rockefeller College of Public Affairs, New York University, USA |
Xuhong Su | University of South Carolina, USA |
Tao Sun | Nankai University, China |
Ian Seator Thynne | Charles Darwin University, Australia |
Sandra Van Thiel | Erasmus University of Rotterdam, Netherlands |
Frédéric Varone | University of Geneva, Switzerland |
Jean-Patrick Villeneuve | Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration, Lausanne, Switzerland |
Manchuan Wang | China National School of Administration, China |
Clay G Wescott | Asia Pacific Governance Institute, USA |
Wilson Wong | The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.