Description

Book Synopsis
Public administration is under increasing pressure to become more efficient, better geared to the demands and opinions of citizens, more open to contacts with transnational bureaucracies, and more responsive to the ideas of elected policymakers.

Bureaucracy in the Modern State offers a comparative analysis of how these challenges affect public administration in France, the United States, Germany, Japan, Britain, Sweden and the developing countries of the Third World. Specialist chapters written by acknowledged experts on the public policy of each country are brought together in a comparative framework in order to assess the impact of recent changes on the relationship between policy makers and the civil service, and the organizational challenges presented by the introduction of market-based ideology. Assessing public administration from a state-society perspective, the authors focus on four basic factors which they believe determine the role of the bureaucracy in modern societies: the configuration of the state, the relationship between policymakers and the bureaucracy, the internal organizational dynamics of the bureaucracy, and the relationship between the public bureaucracy and civil society. A special analysis of the relationship between domestic and transnational bureaucracies is also included, with particular reference made to the European Union.

Addressing one of the key public policy issues of our time, this book will be widely used by teachers, students and researchers who will welcome the combination of in-depth studies of selected countries, from capitalist democracies to developing countries, with an authoritative comparative analysis held together by a distinct theoretical framework.



Trade Review
'Offering a broad geographical coverage and a comprehensive and well informed treatment of each national case, this book is an important contribution to the comparative understanding of the challenges facing public administration in the 1990s.' -- Wyn Grant, University of Warwick, UK
'. . . is accessible, interesting and extremely useful to all social scientists with interests in this field.' -- Steve Molloy, Reviewing Sociology

Table of Contents
Comparative public administration - the state of the art, Jon Pierre; buureaucracy in a divided regime - the United States, B. Guy Peters; public administration at the crossroads - the end of the French specificity, Luc Rouban; public administration in Germany - political societal relations, Hans-Ulrich Derlien; "deprivileging" the UK civil service in the 1980s - dream or reality, Christopher Hood; Japan - divided bureaucrcy in a unified regime, Ellis S. Kraus; governing the welfare state - public administration, the state and society in Sweden, Jon Pierre; public administration in developing countries - Kenya and Tanzania in comparative comparative perspective, Goran Hyden; the Europeanization of the national bureaucracies?, Edward C. Page and Linda Wouters; conclusions - a framework of comparative public administration, Jon Pierre.

Bureaucracy in the Modern State: An Introduction

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    A Hardback by Jon Pierre

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      View other formats and editions of Bureaucracy in the Modern State: An Introduction by Jon Pierre

      Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 01/01/1995
      ISBN13: 9781852787257, 978-1852787257
      ISBN10: 1852787252

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Public administration is under increasing pressure to become more efficient, better geared to the demands and opinions of citizens, more open to contacts with transnational bureaucracies, and more responsive to the ideas of elected policymakers.

      Bureaucracy in the Modern State offers a comparative analysis of how these challenges affect public administration in France, the United States, Germany, Japan, Britain, Sweden and the developing countries of the Third World. Specialist chapters written by acknowledged experts on the public policy of each country are brought together in a comparative framework in order to assess the impact of recent changes on the relationship between policy makers and the civil service, and the organizational challenges presented by the introduction of market-based ideology. Assessing public administration from a state-society perspective, the authors focus on four basic factors which they believe determine the role of the bureaucracy in modern societies: the configuration of the state, the relationship between policymakers and the bureaucracy, the internal organizational dynamics of the bureaucracy, and the relationship between the public bureaucracy and civil society. A special analysis of the relationship between domestic and transnational bureaucracies is also included, with particular reference made to the European Union.

      Addressing one of the key public policy issues of our time, this book will be widely used by teachers, students and researchers who will welcome the combination of in-depth studies of selected countries, from capitalist democracies to developing countries, with an authoritative comparative analysis held together by a distinct theoretical framework.



      Trade Review
      'Offering a broad geographical coverage and a comprehensive and well informed treatment of each national case, this book is an important contribution to the comparative understanding of the challenges facing public administration in the 1990s.' -- Wyn Grant, University of Warwick, UK
      '. . . is accessible, interesting and extremely useful to all social scientists with interests in this field.' -- Steve Molloy, Reviewing Sociology

      Table of Contents
      Comparative public administration - the state of the art, Jon Pierre; buureaucracy in a divided regime - the United States, B. Guy Peters; public administration at the crossroads - the end of the French specificity, Luc Rouban; public administration in Germany - political societal relations, Hans-Ulrich Derlien; "deprivileging" the UK civil service in the 1980s - dream or reality, Christopher Hood; Japan - divided bureaucrcy in a unified regime, Ellis S. Kraus; governing the welfare state - public administration, the state and society in Sweden, Jon Pierre; public administration in developing countries - Kenya and Tanzania in comparative comparative perspective, Goran Hyden; the Europeanization of the national bureaucracies?, Edward C. Page and Linda Wouters; conclusions - a framework of comparative public administration, Jon Pierre.

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