International Congress on Public Administration & Civil Service on January 20-22, 2027 in Pattaya, Thailand - Conference Index

International Congress on Public Administration & Civil Service on January 20-22, 2027 in Pattaya, Thailand

International Congress on Public Administration & Civil Service January 20, 2027 - Pattaya, Thailand

The idea of PATTAYA 61st International Congress on Public Administration & Civil Service (PACS-27) scheduled on Jan. 20-22, 2027 Pattaya (Thailand) is for the researchers, academicians, managers, social scientists, scholars, engineers and parctitioners from all around the world to present and share ongoing research activities. This conference provides opportunities for the delegates to exchange new ideas and application experiences face to face, to establish business or research relations and to find global partners for future collaboration. The conference is being organized by Dignified Researchers Publication (DiRPUB) operating under Pilares D'Elegancia LDA.

All full paper submissions will be peer reviewed and evaluated based on originality, technical and/or research content/depth, correctness, relevance to conference, contributions, and readability.

All accepted papers of the conference will be published in the conference proceedings with valid International ISBN number that will be registered at: Portugal (EU) that will be provided at the time of the conference as the Softcopy on Flash Drive. Each Paper will be assigned Digital Object Identifier (DOI) from CROSSREF (USA). The proceedings will be Indexed in DOI-Crossref (USA) and can be indexed with the all the major search engines like Google Scholars, Google etc automatically. The proceedings of the Conference will be published by DiRPUB-CPS (Conference Publishing Services) and will be will be archived in the DiRPUB's Digital Library. The papers can be submitted to Emerging Sources Citation Index [THOMSON REUTERS] OR SCOPUS Indexed journals possible indexing with extra charges (the conference fee is compulsory to be paid)

One BEST Session Paper will be selected from each oral session. The Certificate for Session's Best Papers will be awarded at the time of the conference.

In addition to the above, nominations are solicited for the YOUNG RESERACHER OF THE YEAR & BEST RESERACHER OF THE YEAR awards. Interested persons can contact us by email.

English is the official language of the conference. We welcome paper submissions. Prospective authors are invited to submit full (and original research) papers (which is NOT submitted or published or under consideration anywhere in other conferences/journal) in electronic (DOC or PDF) format alongwith the contact information.

All registered papers will be online at ISBN DOI Indexed Conference Proceedings OR ISSN journals OR SCOPUS / ESCI Indexed Journals with added charges.

Call for papers/Topics

Full Articles/ Reviews/ Shorts Papers/ Abstracts are welcomed in the following research fields:

1. Foundational Theories and Models of Governance

These core topics establish how public administration evolved from strict, rule-bound systems into agile, modern networks.

Classical Administrative Theory

Bureaucratic Model (Max Weber’s characteristics of hierarchy, division of labor, and formal rules)

Scientific Management (Taylorism and efficiency in the public sector)

Administrative Management Theory (Gulick's POSDCORB: Planning, Organizing, Staffing, Directing, Coordinating, Reporting, Budgeting)

The Evolution of Public Management

New Public Management (NPM): Introducing market-driven, private-sector practices into public agencies

New Public Service (NPS): Focusing on citizens, democracy, and public value rather than just efficiency

Digital Era Governance (DEG): How internet-based and data-driven systems restructure state functions

Interrelated Concepts in Theory

The Politics-Administration Dichotomy (The theoretical separation between political lawmakers and neutral administrators)

Public Value Creation (How administrators balance political mandates with actual societal good)

2. Civil Service Structure, Personnel, and Human Resource Management

This theme focuses on the "civil service" itself—the systems, rules, and individuals who staff the machinery of government.

Civil Service Systems

Merit-Based vs. Spoils Systems (Objective qualifications versus political patronage/appointments)

Career Systems (Closed, lifetime advancement tracks) vs. Position Systems (Open competitive hiring for specific roles)

The Role of Civil Service Commissions (Independent oversight bodies that protect neutrality)

Strategic Public Human Resource Management (HRM)

Recruitment, selection, and retention in the face of private-sector competition

Performance appraisal frameworks and civil service pay structures

Collective bargaining, public-sector unions, and labor relations

Interrelated Workforce Issues

Representative Bureaucracy (Ensuring civil service demographics mirror the general public to build trust)

The Neutrality-Responsiveness Dilemma (How civil servants remain politically neutral while executing the highly political agendas of elected leaders)

3. Public Policy Formulation, Implementation, and Evaluation

Public administration is the primary engine through which public policies are converted from abstract laws into real-world programs.

The Policy Cycle

Agenda Setting and Problem Definition (How issues get the attention of administrators and politicians)

Policy Formulation and Design (Drafting regulations, operational guidelines, and legal frameworks)

Policy Implementation (The mechanics of executing programs on the ground)

Evaluation and Analysis

Program Evaluation Métriques (Assessing efficiency, effectiveness, and equity)

Policy Instrumentation (Choosing between direct delivery, subsidies, taxes, or behavioral nudges)

Interrelated Policy Realities

Street-Level Bureaucracy (How frontline workers, like police officers or social workers, rewrite policy through daily discretion)

Regulatory Capture (When public administrative agencies become co-opted by the private industries they are supposed to regulate)

4. Public Budgeting, Finance, and Fiscal Administration

Money dictates capability. This area covers how resources are extracted, allocated, and audited within the public sphere.

Budgetary Frameworks

Line-Item Budgeting (Focusing strictly on inputs and control)

Performance-Based and Outcome Budgeting (Tying funding directly to agency performance metrics)

Zero-Based Budgeting (Justifying all expenses from scratch every fiscal cycle)

Revenue and Financial Oversight

Public revenue generation (Taxation, user fees, public debt management, and sovereign funds)

Government auditing (Supreme audit institutions, compliance reviews, and financial accountability)

Interrelated Financial Realities

Fiscal Decentralization (How funds are split between central, state, and local governments)

Intergovernmental Grants (The political and administrative strings attached to centralized funding)

5. Public Sector Ethics, Accountability, and Law

Because public administration wields the coercive power of the state, it requires deep checks, balances, and ethical anchors.

Administrative Law

Delegated Legislation (When legislatures give civil servants the power to write specific rules and regulations)

Judicial Review of Administrative Actions (How courts prevent bureaucratic overreach or abuse of discretion)

Principles of Natural Justice and Procedural Fairness

Accountability Mechanisms

Internal Oversight (Inspectors General, internal compliance divisions, and whistleblower protections)

External Oversight (Legislative committees, Ombudsman offices, and media scrutiny)

Interrelated Ethical Dilemmas

Administrative Discretion vs. Democratic Accountability (Balancing a civil servant’s need to make quick decisions with the public's right to control them)

Combating Administrative Corruption (Designing systemic walls against bribery, nepotism, and cronyism)

6. E-Governance, Digital Transformation, and Public Innovation

Modern public administration relies heavily on technology to meet citizen expectations in the 21st century.

Digital Government Infrastructure

E-Government Maturity Models (Transitioning from informational websites to transactional portals)

Interoperability Frameworks (Enabling different government agencies to safely share citizen data)

Data Privacy, Cybersecurity, and Identity Management (e.g., National ID registries)

Emerging Technologies in Administration

Algorithmic decision-making and Artificial Intelligence in public service delivery

Smart Cities and IoT (Internet of Things) infrastructure management

Interrelated Socio-Technical Challenges

The Digital Divide (Ensuring technology-driven public services do not exclude marginalized or offline populations)

Agile Public Innovation (Balancing the risk-averse nature of the civil service with the iterative, high-risk nature of tech adoption)

Name: BELRG
Website: http://belrg.dirpub.org

Related Events