Public Administration
RESEARCH
The publication of new public administration research helps build a body of evidence to support the continuous improvement of Australian public services.
If you are an IPAA member, or your organisation is an IPAA corporate member, then you can access published research papers through our Australian Journal of Public Administration members’ portal.
You can also keep up to date on new research by subscribing to the APO newsletter service, and to ANZSOG’s research translation newsletter ‘The Bridge‘.
If your interest is in public trust, then Democracy 2025 provides the latest evidence on how different groups of Australians understand and imagine their democracy, and the strengths and weaknesses of our political institutions and democratic practices, through their Public Trust Program.
And if you are a public administration researcher looking for funding, consider applying for a small scale grant through the Public Administration Research Trust Fund. These grants are made annually following an open call for applications.
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THE PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION RESEARCH TRUST FUND
Scroll down to view the latest research news and features.
Is paradoxical leadership the competency we need now, more than ever?
With coronavirus bringing massive challenges and great turbulence to public sector work around the globe, the recent publication of a New Zealand research paper on paradoxical leadership and its contribution to employee resilience could not be more timely.
Academics ask: Is gender really on anyone’s agenda?
The December 2019 issue of The Australian Journal of Public Administration published a ‘controversy’ by two academics who examined submissions made to the Independent Review of the Australian Public Service to assess whether, and how, organisations had considered gender equality.
Researchers win 2019 Sam Richardson Award with study of female comics
Dr Christopher Pepin-Neff from The University of Sydney and Ms Kristin Caporale from Assumption College, have won the 2019 Sam Richardson Award for the most influential paper published in ‘The Australian Journal of Public Administration’.
Sophie Yates, Winner of the 2017 Sam Richardson Award, Collects the Rosemary O’Leary Prize
UNSW Canberra Postdoctoral research Dr Sophie Yates has collected another prize for her paper on gender published last year in the Australian Journal of Public Administration.
The Australian Journal of Public Administration — tracing the study and practice of public administration for 81 years
The Australian Journal of Public Administration has been in continuous publication for 81 years, documenting the changing face of public administration, public management and public policy through the different lenses of public servants, politicians and academics