The Administrative State
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Administrative State is Dwight Waldo's classic public administration text based on a dissertation written at Yale in which Waldo argues that democratic states are underpinned by professional and political bureaucracies and that scientific management and efficiency is not the core idea of government bureaucracy, but rather it is service to the public. The work has contributed to the structure and theory of government bureaucracies the world over and is one of the defining works of public administration and political science written in the last 75 years.
Published in 1948 and later reissued in a second edition with an extensively revised introduction by Waldo.
[edit] Sources
- "Putting the Purpose in P.A." The Maxwell Perspective, Spring 2001