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 *INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE *

“Globalization and Public Sector Reforms in India and China” Copenhagen,
September 23-24, 2011.



Organized by Kjeld Erik Brødsgaard and Anthony P. D’Costa

Asia Research Centre

Copenhagen Business School



Not a single day goes by in the business press without mentioning China and
India.  Both countries are trying to shed whatever form of “socialism” they
might have claimed to have fostered.  But their public sectors, despite some
restructuring, continue to exist.  The public sector has an important
economic, social, and political place.  A weak capitalist class, the
political need to control critical sectors, the significance of spillover
effects, state investments complementing private initiatives, and generating
well-paid, secure jobs are well known justifications for a public
sector.  However,
public sectors everywhere have been beset with inefficiency,
unprofitability, and lack of competitiveness thus draining the public
exchequer of increasingly scarcer budgets.  Hence, an economic, political,
and ideological frontal onslaught has been unleashed to reform the public
sector to make it efficient and market-conforming.



Whatever be the merits of public sector reform the real challenge for both
China and India is how they can cope with the twin demands of
market-friendly policies and job creation for the masses.  Although there
are by now a number of comparative studies of recent developments in China
and India, a study of public sector reform in the two countries have never
been done in a systematic way. Given the complex tasks and functions arising
out of the ongoing modernization process, one might somewhat
unconventionally argue that China and India perhaps need more government and
government officials rather than retrenchment of the public sector.



Following the December 2009 conference on *Globalization and Economic
Nationalism in Asia* this conference revisits the role of the state but in a
different way.  The objective is to firmly grasp the central issues
surrounding public sector reform in China and India.  This conference calls
for papers that directly address the significance of public sector reforms
in China and India in the wider political, economic, and social contexts.  We
are interested in empirically-driven papers that are also theoretically
grounded.  Both national and comparative perspectives for analyzing public
sector reforms in China and India are welcome.  We are also open to
well-positioned industry, sectoral, technological, and national-regional
analysis of public sector reforms.  Given the nature of the theme,
interdisciplinary, political-economic, sociological, and
historically-sensitive analysis will be seen as the most appropriate.  The
following broad interrelated themes are indicative of the issues the
conference hopes to capture:

I.                    Economic development and public sector reform.

II.                  Status of public sector reform in China and India.

III.               Public sector reform and employment.

IV.                Public sector reform and the political system.

V.                  Public sector reform, business development, and
public-private partnerships.

VI.                The civil service system

VII.             Looking to the future.



The conference will take place at the Copenhagen Business School in
Copenhagen, September 23-24, 2011.



Keynote speakers and invited presenters include:

Dr Parthasarathi Banerjee, Director National Institute of Science and
Technology and Development Studies, Government of India, New Delhi

Professor Pranab Bardhan, Department of Economics, University of California,
Berkeley

Professor John Burns, Head of Department of Government and Political
Science, Hong Kong University

Professor Manoranjan Mohanty, Department of Political Science University of
Delhi

Professor Peter Nolan, Judge Business School, Cambridge University

Professor Jean Oi, Department of Political Science, Stanford University

Professor Andrew Walder, Head of Department of Sociology, Stanford
University

Professor Christine Wong, University of Oxford

Professor Zheng Yongnian, Director of East Asian Institute, National
University of Singapore



In addition to these especially invited scholars there is a call for papers.
We expect a total of 20 paper presentations over a two-day period.

Scholars and policy-makers who wish to present at the conference are invited
to submit an expanded 4-page (double- spaced, approximately 1,000 words)
abstract and a CV in MSWord format electronically by April 25, 2011 to:
[log in to unmask], see also www.cbs.dk/psric for additional details.



The conference organizers will make every effort to provide economy airfare
and accommodation for presenters whose papers are selected by the scientific
committee.  However, invited participants should also explore alternative
travel support as well.



FOR ALL SUBMISSION AND UPDATED CONFERENCE DETAILS GO TO www.cbs.dk/psric

*PLEASE DISTRIBUTE AS WIDELY AS POSSIBLE TO INSTITUTIONS AND COLLEAGUES*


-- 
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Anthony P. D'Costa
Professor of Indian Studies and Research Director
Asia Research Centre
Copenhagen Business School
Dalgas Have 15
DK-2000 Frederiksberg, Denmark
Ph: +45 3815 2572

*A NEW INDIA?*
http://www.anthempress.com/pdf/9780857286642.pdf
http://uk.cbs.dk/arc
http://www.thisismodernindia.com/this_is_modern_india_about_us.html
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

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