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Administrative Renewal: Reorganization Commissions in the 20th Century

Autor Ronald C. Moe
en Limba Engleză Paperback – mai 2003
The intent of Administrative Renewal is to study the evolution of executive branch organization during the recently completed 20th century. The approach selected for the exercise is to review the 'landmark commissions,' such as the Hoover Commissions of mid-century, to determine how and why they were created and what they accomplished. The objective is to study each of the commissions to determine how they interpreted their mission and what others concluded about their successes and failures.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780761825449
ISBN-10: 0761825444
Pagini: 164
Dimensiuni: 143 x 211 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția University Press of America
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Evolving Theoretical Foundations of the Executive Branch: The Federalist Creation; Organizational Management in the 19th Century; Progressivism and Its Values; Rise and Decline of Orthodoxy; Heterodoxy: Deconstructing the State; New Public Managemen
Chapter 3 Landmark Commissions: Keep Commission (1905-1909); President's Commission on Economy and Efficiency (1910-1913); Joint Committee on Reorganization (1921-1924); Reorganization Authority (1930-1933); President's Committee on Administrative Management
Chapter 4 The Future of Reorganization Commissions
Chapter 5 Selected Bibliography
Chapter 6 Index

Recenzii

Ronald Moe has summed up a career of careful scholarship on the organization and management of the executive branch in this concise volume on the major landmark commissions of the 20th century. Moe has not been a bystander on these issues; from his perch at the Congressional Research Service, he has participated in the deliberations surrounding the adoption or rejection of many of the proposals he analyzes. Reorganizing the executive branch is not for amateurs; anyone interested in understanding thestructure of the executive ranch or in reforming it, should begin with Moe's dissection of the theory and implementation of past reorganization commissions. 'Administrative Renewal' is an impressive accomplishment that should be read by anyone contemplating changes in executive branch structure.
Americans are inveterate tinkerers. That's as true for the management of the federal government as anywhere in American society. In this terrific study Moe charts the course of a long parade of commissions that, thought the 20th century, sought to increase government's efficiency and reduce its costs. The result is not only an invaluable survey of the thinking behind reform ideas, successful and not. It's also a guidebook on how to think about making government work better-and what steps are most likely to work. The book is must reading for anyone who cares about where we've been and where we need to go.