Reviews
Useful for advanced students and faculty... Recommended.
Cook points out the significant salutary consequences for policy development that can arise from recognizing public administration's distinct constitutive role in our regime.
Traces, often quite nicely and originally, the tension between what the author calls 'instrumental' and 'constitutive' conceptions of public administration through American history... a provocative argument... [that] provides extensive evidence of the potency of the instrumental conception of the bureaucracy for American politicians.
Represents a valuable addition to the literature on bureaucratic discretion in our democratic system. It should certainly become mandatory reading in public administration programs and political science departments and, it is hoped, among public officials as well. I profited greatly from it and expect that all those who read it will share similar convictions.
Book Details
Preface to the Second Edition
Series Editor's Foreword
Preface to the First Edition
Acknowledgments to the First Edition
1. Public Administration as Instrument and Institution
2. Preserving the Chain of
Preface to the Second Edition
Series Editor's Foreword
Preface to the First Edition
Acknowledgments to the First Edition
1. Public Administration as Instrument and Institution
2. Preserving the Chain of Dependence: The Ideas of the Founding and Early Republic
3. Restoring Republican Virtue: The Impact of Jacksonian Ideals
4. Perfecting the Neutral Instrument: Transformations of the Second State and Progressive Reforms
5. Serving the Liberal State: Administration and the Rise of the New Deal Political Order
6. Politics and Administration after the New Deal: Liberal Orthodoxy and Its Challenges
7. The Constitutive Dimension of Public Administration: Appreciating Consequences
8. Bureaucracy and the Future of American Self-Government
References
Index