The Case for Bureaucracy: A Public Administration PolemicSAGE Publications, 2004 - 208 pages The Case for Bureaucracy persuasively argues that American public servants and administrative institutions are among the best in the world. Contrary to popular stereotypes, they are neither sources of great waste nor a threat to liberty, but social assets of critical value to a functioning democracy. In presenting his case, Goodsell touches on core aspects of public administration while drawing on important, recent events to bring case material and empirical evidence fully up to date. Updating worth highlighting:
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... conclude , because of the constraints of governmental budgets and public personnel systems . Brehm and Gates then look for evi- dence as to whether federal bureaucrats are motivated to work at all . Another economics theory , the ...
... conclude this discussion of bureaucratic motivation by summarizing the literature that compares the mindsets of government employees and private- sector employees . Recently Hal Rainey and Barry Bozeman published an overview of the ...
... conclude . “ In most cases the data directly refute the hypothesis . " As for the contention that aging produces rigidity , Meier and Plumlee found that the proportion of agency leaders with legal training tended to in- crease as time ...
Table des matières
Tables and Figures | 2 |
2 | 24 |
More Bureaucracy Myths to Delete | 42 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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The Case for Bureaucracy: A Public Administration Polemic, 4th Edition Charles T. Goodsell Aucun aperçu disponible - 2003 |