(en) This work crowns a doctoral reflexion in political and social sciences, in public administration, more particularly in bond with the public policies, It approaches the problems of the supply of the public goods within three spacial frameworks: national, supranational and infranational. Starting from the electricity supply in the Bukavu area, the work reports the observation of the direct management of the State which disengages out the great sectors, the State being hollowed out with the profit of the actors of the Civil society. The emergence of the practices of additive management in the public administration brings the question: “the practices can constitute a source of renewal of the public policies?” The undertaken study offers prospects showing the capacity of the aforesaid practices to solve the crucial problem of equity and, even, of effectiveness. Here, the necessary economic regulation leads to regulation of the political type, which is the culminating point, so that “necessary” is “sufficient”. On the one hand, additive management in the associative public-private partnership like manner of making the public policy, which is proposed through the practices, requires the withdrawal of the law n° 08/07 of July 7, 2008 which devotes additive management in the capitalist public-private partnership. In addition, it raises the question of the re-examination of the politico-administrative apparatus, the crossed regulation into force since the beginning of the year 2007. The stakes of this re-examination, posed in this thesis, show in terms of Congolese rebuilding and, therefore, supply of the public goods, that the horizontalisation is better suitable than the cross regulation. In a preliminary way, they also show how its “good” implementation requires the supervision of the Civil society.
Affiliations
UCLouvainESPO/SPED - Département des sciences de la population et du développement
Citations
APA
Chicago
FWB
Muhinduka, D.-K. D. (2010). Gestion additive, biens publics et fourniture de l’électricité dans la région de Bukavu, RD Congo. https://hdl.handle.net/2078.5/130085