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PART II … Capacity Through Education and Training: An African Perspective
developing and strengthening leadership capacity for the implementation of the
Millennium Goals and other intergovernmental commitments.
Leadership Capacity Enhancement Initiative
One such initiative was a United Nations Ad hoc Expert Group Meeting on “the
New Challenges for Senior Leadership Enhancement for Improved Public Manage-
ment in a Globalizing World” organized in Turin (Italy) on 19 and 20 September
2002 which was co-chaired by Guido Bertucci and Allan Rosenbaum. The objective
was to consult a core group of leading experts in public administration and train-
ing, with special interest in, and knowledge of, the education and training needs
of senior public sector leadership, on the design of an appropriate methodology
for enhancing the skills of the current and future generations of senior public
sector leaders. The meeting was intended to promote the exchange of experiences
and ideas and create opportunity for new thinking in order to produce an output,
which would be relevant for guiding countries to provide more effective education
and training opportunities for their top-level public sector leadership. The Expert
Group Meeting also aimed at identifying the implementation mechanisms of the
initiative and the most effective manner of involving relevant regional organiza-
tions. Finally, by promoting exchange of country experiences and best practices, the
Meeting had the goal of providing guidance to appropriate strategic partnerships
and the synergies, which can result from them.
The gist of the conclusions of the meeting was that the strengthening of pub-
lic administration capacity (especially public sector leadership) is critical for the
achievement of the United Nations Millennium Goals. The meeting stressed that
leadership is critical to the future of governance, future of democracy and future of
people’s well being. This message was reinforced by a letter that the Chairperson
of the United Nations Committee of Experts on Public Administration, Prof.
Apolo Nsibambi, the Prime Minister of Uganda, faxed to the meeting, reiterating
the importance of leadership capacity development and calling for particular at-
tention to be placed on the specific problems of specific regions, especially Africa,
and underlining the relationship between leadership and governance.
One key conclusion from the meeting – which is of direct relevance and
consequence to NEPAD, and which was mostly underlined by the experts from
Africa present at the meeting – was that leadership is culture loaded and situation
specific. As such the UNDESA leadership development initiative should be, and
has been, planned and implemented in close association and collaboration with
regional and national training institutes on the African continent. The meeting
took this observation to be applicable in all regions where the leadership capacity
development initiative will be implemented.
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