Social Sciences, asked by vasavakaka, 6 months ago

Which governance policy has India accepted

Answers

Answered by shreedehankar
19

Answer:

democracy

Explanation:

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Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

Public policy in India is in a state of flux. The nature of the

policy process has changed dramatically with an increasing

role of different actors, both locally and globally. A case is

made to listen to the multiple voices that are emerging in

governance processes; it is argued that it is necessary to

create a space for dialogue among civil society and citizens

(Lahiri-Dutt, 2008). The demand for stronger links between

research and policy has grown, as much as efforts to mainstreaming public policy education to professionalize the

bureaucracy.

Several trends at the global level have shaped policymaking at the level of nation-states, often creating claims

of the erosion of state autonomy (Chang, 2006). New discourses have emerged that shape policy choices. Several

discourses have been nevertheless reduced to the status of

rhetoric and cliché. Emerging demographic trends at the

national level—such as urbanization—and environmental

trends at the global level—such as climate change—have

redefined the contours of public policy and governance,

posing new challenges for policy formulation as well as

engendering debates on appropriate forms of governance.

Governance refers to all manners of exercising control

and authority in the allocation of resources (World Bank,

1994). Governance issues are thus closely tied to the processes and mechanisms through which people access

resources. These include issues of property rights, social

relationships and gender, as well as social capital through

which people access resources. Several approaches to governance reform have been experimented within the past;

however, the extent to which they have improved the

control of resource users remains a moot question. Often

this has been a question of efforts at changing control relations between the state and civil society; while policies

have succeeded in creating management capacity at lower

levels, it has been more difficult to alter power and control

Explanation:

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