—an essential precondition to eventual European Union membership. This is being achieved through targeted reforms designed to make the central government human resources management system more accountable and transparent and ultimately more effective.
Therefore, our project focuses on leadership development and training, human resources management governance, and infrastructure to support the professionalization of the Ukrainian public service. Our project office in Kyiv serves as a focal point for the development of public service partnerships between the Main Department of Civil Service of Ukraine and Canadian public service institutions, such as the Public Service Commission of Canada and the Canada School of Public Service, to name but a few.
Now what we'd like to do is try to answer those questions Ms. Wittfooth put forward around public service partnerships and our perspectives. Do public service partnerships between nations matter, and if so, why? The short answer, of course, is yes, they do matter.
As your committee has already heard from other witnesses and as you will learn from your continued review of other jurisdictions' approaches, building public service capacity is crucial to a country's development and prosperity. Indeed, that is why in recent years we've witnessed a growing trend among multinational institutions to link loans to public service reform. In the case of many former east bloc countries, European Union membership has largely been contingent upon meeting European Union or Euro-Atlantic public service norms or baselines.
More to the point, public service partnerships have contributed enormously to the development of many emerging countries now being touted as success stories. Effective public service partnerships contribute to national self-sufficiency, not continued dependence.
Canada has a long tradition of supporting such activities and delivering results in a variety of countries, from the contribution of the RCMP to police training in Haiti, to Health Canada's contributions to better public health planning in Cambodia, to Finance Canada's contributions to modernizing the central banking system in China, to Elections Canada's support for electoral reform across the globe, to public service and public administration reform support in countries such as Ukraine and Georgia.
We would like to underscore that these projects typically provide opportunities for two-way learning, learning that benefits both the beneficiaries of the intended support and the Canadian partner.