More Thatcher than the real thing: Policy Transfer and Economic Reforms in New Zealand

Menz, Georg. 2002. More Thatcher than the real thing: Policy Transfer and Economic Reforms in New Zealand. In: M de Jong; K Lalenis and V.D. Mamadouh, eds. The Theory and Practice of Institutional Transplantation: Experiences with the Transfer of Policy Institutions. Springer, pp. 137-152. ISBN 978-1402010491 [Book Section]

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Abstract or Description

Inevitably, at a panel discussion not too long ago comparing planning cultures the discussion turned on the issue of globalisation. As a member of the panel, this author asked those in the audience who lived and/or worked in a country different from their country of origin to raise their hands. About half of the audience of well over one hundred academic teachers and researchers from all comers of the world, the present author included did so. Next he asked who had a spouse or partner from a country different from their country of origin to also raise their hands. About half of the audience, the present author included, raised their hands. This is the soft side of globalisation. The soft side of globalisation is important. Exchanges, personal mobility, international romances, multi-culturalism and multi-lingualism (inevitably meaning non-native speakers struggling to keep up with native English speakers) are part of the academic scene, so much so that we can hardly imagine it to be otherwise. These are not entirely new phenomena, but they have become ever more prominent, relying on an ever more elaborate institutional infrastructure of exchange programmes, international journals, associations and the global conference industry. It was at the AESOP (Association of European Schools of Planning) congress at Bmo in the Czech Republic in July 2000 that the plan for this book was hatched.

Item Type:

Book Section

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Politics

Dates:

DateEvent
2002Published

Item ID:

12587

Date Deposited:

11 Aug 2015 10:28

Last Modified:

30 Jun 2017 12:13

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/12587

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