







The Online Journal & Network of ASPA’s
Section for Public Management Practice

American Society for
Public Administration
VIDEO



Interview on the
UN World Food Program
Bill Miller
Global Connections Television
Bettina Luescher is the UN World Food Program Spokesman and in her interview with Ben Miller talked about the challenge of feeding 90 000 000 people around the world.





Interview on Violation of
International Humanitarian Law
Bill Miller
Global Connections Television
Stephen Rapp is Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, a country in West Afrika. In his interview with Bill Miller, he talks about violations of the international humanitarian law and measures to deal with its problems.



Interview on Children
and the Armed Conflict
Bill Miller
Global Connections Television
Radhika Coomaraswamy works as Under-



Interview with Ambassador Krueger
Interview by Warren Master
Diplomacy & Genocide in Burundi: An interview with Ambassador Robert Krueger and Kathleen Tobin Krueger.




Frances Johnson-
Frances Johnson-


Muhammad A.S. Hikam, Senior Adviser,
Kiroyan Kuhon Partners
Muhammad A.S. Hikam describes constitutional and governance reforms and efforts to build a civil society in Indonesia since 1998. A member of the Hanura (People’s Conscience) political party, a former member of the Indonesian Parliament, and a former state minister for research and technology, he explains that prior to Indonesia’s financial crisis in 1988 and the collapse of the Suharto government, civil society in Indonesia Muhammad A.S. Hikamwas “corporatist”; that is, all civil society organizations and political parties were controlled by the state. In 1998, it was recognized that a strengthened civil society was the only avenue to challenge the overwhelming power of the state. The result was a flowering of as many as 100,000 civil society organizations and 38 political parties. However, nearly all came into being without the capacity or understanding to pursue their roles effectively. Many were based on ethnic or identity interests and did not know how to relate to the political life of the country. The challenge was to train civil and political society to find synergies between interests and needs. Without that, governmental reform has been, and will continue to be, a patchwork, he says. He discusses the successes and shortcomings of reforms in four principal areas: changing the constitution to reduce state domination, opening the political process to opposition parties, removing the military from politics and placing civilian control over the police and armed forces, and decentralizing government and ceding some autonomy to the regions. These efforts have proceeded without regard for capacity building, he says. As a result, poorer regions simply establish regional governments funded by the central government without developing their own capabilities. Hikam stresses that economic development is essential if regional autonomy is to work.
