This is a report on human resources management practices in the public administrations of four central
and eastern European countries: Albania, Estonia, Hungary and Poland. The report is based on
information from 1996. Since then significant changes have occurred in at least two of the countries. In
Poland a new Civil Service Act came into force in January 1997 (certain provisions came into force 30
days after the Act’s promulgation); and in Albania the current situation in the administration is difficult to
assess due to recent political upheaval. When this report was prepared in 1996, Albania, Estonia and
Hungary all had civil service laws in force, while in Poland the1982 Act on Civil Servants still regulated
employment in the state administration.
The report’s purpose is to determine to what extent the implementation of a specific law for employment
in the administration would lead to significant changes in personnel management or in the preconditions
for management, selection and promotion of staff. This report is therefore about public personnel
management systems, management procedures and management practices and how they either support or
hinder professionalism and appropriate conduct. To a certain extent it is also about the legislation and
institutions as well as the training necessary to promote suitable civil service behaviour.
The study was based on a common guideline document developed together with experts from the four
countries. These experts are Odeta Dibra, Lawyer, Albania (now with UNESCO); Professor Georg Sootla,
Tallinn Pedagogical University, Estonia; Istvan Borbiro, Lawyer, Jutasi & Partners, Hungary; and
Wojciech Marchlewski, Co-operation and Partnership, Poland. The four experts used the guideline
document as a reference tool for conducting interviews in the administrations of their countries and for
reporting their findings.
Promoting Performance and Professionalism in the Public Service
Policy analysis
SIGMA Papers
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