Multinational Research Society Publisher

Mission and Vision
Our Mission
At MRS Publisher, our mission is to advance the dissemination of high-quality, peer-reviewed research to a global audience, enabling unrestricted access to scholarly content. We strive to facilitate the free exchange of knowledge and foster academic collaboration, empowering researchers, educators, and practitioners across disciplines to contribute to the advancement of science and society. By providing open access to research outputs, we aim to enhance the visibility, impact, and accessibility of scholarly work while supporting a sustainable and equitable knowledge-sharing ecosystem.
Our Vision
Our vision is to become a leading force in the global open-access publishing landscape, promoting transparency, inclusivity, and collaboration within the scientific community. We envision a future where all academic research is freely accessible, enabling innovation, accelerating discovery, and supporting evidence-based decision-making in policy, education, and practice. Through our commitment to open access, MRS Publisher seeks to break down barriers to knowledge and empower a diverse range of voices and perspectives in the pursuit of knowledge and societal progress.
Open Access Policy
MRS Publisher is committed to promoting open access to all scholarly works published under our name. We firmly believe that providing open access to research articles, journals, and other scholarly materials increases the visibility and accessibility of research, maximizes the impact of scientific inquiry, and accelerates the exchange of knowledge across borders and disciplines.
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Latest Article
1. Towards A Capable and Ethical State: Evaluating Public Service Profess...
1

Dr. John Motsamai Modise*
Tshwane University of Technology
1-15
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21305484

South Africa continues to experience persistent public management challenges despite an extensive constitutional, legislative, and policy framework designed to promote accountable, ethical, and developmental governance. This article examines the recent challenges confronting public management in South Africa, focusing on governance failures, corruption, state capture, institutional capacity, ethical leadership, accountability, public service professionalisation, and service delivery. The article further evaluates current public sector reforms and proposes practical strategies for strengthening governance and building a capable, ethical, and developmental state. Although South Africa has established comprehensive governance frameworks, including the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, the Batho Pele White Paper (1997), the National Development Plan (NDP) 2030, and the National Framework Towards the Professionalisation of the Public Sector (2022), persistent challenges such as corruption, political interference, weak institutional capacity, poor financial management, ineffective accountability, and declining public trust continue to undermine public sector performance and service delivery. These governance deficiencies have constrained socio-economic development and weakened the effectiveness of democratic institutions. The study employed a systematic literature review (SLR) using a qualitative research approach. A systematic search and critical review of peer-reviewed journal articles, books, government legislation, policy documents, commission reports, oversight institution reports, and publications from national and international organisations were undertaken. The review incorporated evidence from the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture (Zondo Commission), the Public Service Commission (PSC), the Auditor-General South Africa (AGSA), the Department of Public Service and Administration (DPSA), the National Planning Commission, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and the United Nations (UN). The collected data were analysed using thematic analysis to identify recurring governance challenges, reform initiatives, and emerging trends in South African public management. The review found that South Africa possesses a robust constitutional and policy framework for public administration; however, implementation remains inconsistent. Corruption, state capture, political interference, weak institutional capacity, ineffective leadership, inadequate accountability, poor financial management, and limited implementation of governance reforms continue to impede effective service delivery. The findings further indicate that public service professionalisation, merit-based recruitment, ethical leadership, strengthened oversight, improved financial governance, institutional capacity development, and effective implementation of the recommendations of the Zondo Commission, Public Service Commission, and Auditor-General South Africa are critical to improving governance and restoring public trust. The article concludes that strengthening public management in South Africa requires more than policy and legislative reform; it requires effective implementation, ethical leadership, institutional professionalism, transparent governance, robust accountability mechanisms, and sustained political commitment. The successful implementation of public sector reforms has the potential to improve service delivery, enhance institutional resilience, combat corruption, restore public confidence, and contribute to the achievement of the National Development Plan 2030, the African Union Agenda 2063, and United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 16. The article provides evidence-based recommendations that contribute to policy development, public sector reform, and future research on governance and public administration.
2. The Madlanga Commission and the Crisis of Criminal Justice Governance...
1

Dr. John Motsamai Modise*
Tshwane University of Technology
7-22
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21305402

South Africa's criminal justice system has faced increasing scrutiny due to allegations of political interference, organised crime infiltration, corruption, and weakened accountability mechanisms. The establishment of the Madlanga Commission in 2025 marked a significant governance intervention aimed at investigating allegations of criminality, political influence, and corruption within key criminal justice institutions. Despite the importance of the Commission, limited scholarly attention has been given to its implications for criminal justice governance, institutional accountability, and democratic governance in South Africa. The central problem addressed in this study is the growing concern that political interference, organised crime infiltration, and corruption have undermined the effectiveness, independence, and credibility of South Africa's criminal justice institutions, thereby threatening the rule of law and public trust. The purpose of this study was to critically examine the role, significance, and potential impact of the Madlanga Commission in addressing governance failures within South Africa's criminal justice system. The study sought to explore the extent to which the Commission can contribute to strengthening accountability, institutional integrity, transparency, and democratic governance. A qualitative systematic literature review approach was adopted. Data were collected through the analysis of academic literature, government reports, official commission documents, policy papers, governance reports, and relevant secondary sources relating to corruption, organised crime, political interference, accountability, and criminal justice reform. The study was guided by Institutional Theory, Good Governance Theory, and Accountability Theory, which provided a framework for analysing governance failures and institutional vulnerabilities within criminal justice institutions.The findings revealed that political interference, organised crime infiltration, weak oversight structures, and corruption constitute significant threats to the effectiveness and legitimacy of South Africa's criminal justice system. The study further found that accountability failures and institutional weaknesses create opportunities for criminal influence and governance failures. Evidence suggests that the Madlanga Commission serves as an important accountability mechanism capable of exposing institutional vulnerabilities, promoting transparency, and recommending reforms aimed at strengthening criminal justice governance. However, the study found that the long-term effectiveness of the Commission will largely depend on the implementation of its recommendations and the commitment of relevant stakeholders to institutional reform. The study concludes that the Madlanga Commission represents a critical opportunity to strengthen the rule of law, restore public trust, and enhance institutional accountability within South Africa's criminal justice system. Effective implementation of the Commission's recommendations could contribute significantly to combating corruption, preventing political interference, improving governance, and promoting institutional resilience. The study recommends strengthened oversight mechanisms, enhanced anti-corruption measures, greater institutional independence, and comprehensive criminal justice reforms to safeguard democratic governance and constitutional accountability.
3. Writing the Margins: Caste, Class, and Gender as Sites of Resistance i...
3

Supriya*
Ph. D. Research Scholar, Department of English, VKSU, Arrah
5-8
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21272897

Arundhati Roy occupies a distinctive position in contemporary Indian English fiction as a writer whose literary imagination is inseparable from her political activism. Her two novels, The God of Small Things (1997) and The Ministry of Utmost Happiness (2017), separated by two decades, together constitute a sustained literary meditation on the structures of power that organise Indian society along the axes of caste, class, and gender. Rather than treating these categories as background social detail, Roy positions them as the central architecture of her narratives, using the intimate lives of her characters to expose how systemic hierarchies discipline desire, love, and belonging. This paper examines how Roy transforms marginality itself into a site of resistance, arguing that her fiction refuses the conventional realist strategy of representing the oppressed as passive victims and instead endows them with narrative agency, subversive desire, and quiet defiance. Drawing on postcolonial and feminist literary theory, along with concepts of subalternity, intersectionality, and heteronormativity, the paper analyses Roy's treatment of the "Love Laws" in The God of Small Things and the politics of embodiment and belonging in The Ministry of Utmost Happiness. It further considers Roy's narrative techniques, particularly her fragmented chronology, her attention to the materiality of bodies, and her deployment of the small and the ordinary as instruments of political critique. The paper concludes that Roy's novels function as counter-hegemonic texts that write the margins not merely as spaces of suffering but as fertile ground for resistance, solidarity, and alternative forms of community.
4. Idealised Love and Emotional Fragility in White Nights: A Study of Rom...
4

V. Gayathri*
Assistant Professor in English, G. E. Society’s RNC Arts, JDB Commerce and NSC Science College, Nashik Road, Tal. & Dist. Nashik, Maharashtra, India
1-4
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21272762

Fyodor Dostoevsky's novella White Nights (1848) presents a profound exploration of romantic idealism and the inherent fragility of human emotions through the lens of a transient encounter in St. Petersburg. This paper examines the central protagonist, the Dreamer, whose idealised vision of love serves as both a refuge from his isolated existence and a catalyst for emotional vulnerability. By juxtaposing the Dreamer's fantastical aspirations with the grounded reality embodied by Nastenka, Dostoevsky illustrates the tension between romantic illusion and the sobering demands of genuine human connection. The study delves into how the novella portrays emotional fragility not merely as a personal failing but as an intrinsic component of the romantic temperament. Through detailed textual analysis, this research highlights Dostoevsky's early philosophical concerns with isolation, the redemptive potential of love, and the psychological costs of retreating into an imagined world. The findings suggest that White Nights functions as a critical commentary on the perils of romantic escapism, offering insights into the emotional architecture of characters trapped between desire and disillusionment. Ultimately, the paper argues that Dostoevsky's depiction of idealised love reveals profound truths about the human condition, where the fragility of emotions both enables profound connection and precipitates inevitable heartbreak. This analysis contributes to broader discussions in literary studies concerning the representation of psychological interiority in nineteenth-century Russian prose and the enduring relevance of Dostoevsky's insights into the nature of romantic longing.