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GOVT377

Bureaucracy in the Modern State: The Evolution and Exercise of Bureaucratic Power in the United States
GOVT377 FA

Not Currently Offered

"It has long been popular in the United States to denounce the bureaucracy and then to augment it," someone once quipped. This seminar focusses on the evolution and exercise of bureaucratic power in the United States and how it is that a democratic society has come to entrust so much policy making to officials who are at some distance removed from the electoral process. The course will focus principally on the national government, and on the struggles over the years to harness bureaucratic power through such strategies as government organization, patronage and the classified service, the budget, administrative procedures, judicial review, and citizen participation. The seminar will integrate historical and contemporary material, from both primary and secondary sources, beginning with the debates in the First Congress over the creation of the "Great Executive Departments" to the Clinton Administration's promise to reinvent government (Vice President Al Gore's "From Red Tape to Results: Creating a Government That Works Better And Costs Less," U.S. Government Printing Office, September 7, 1993), and including, in between, such landmark legislation and confrontations as the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 (24 State 379) the Nixon Administration's PLOT THAT FAILED (Richard Nathan, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1975), and the Clinton Administration's difficulties and delays in filling federal posts.

MAJOR READINGS

This seminar will integrate historical and
contemporary naterial from both primary and secondary
sources. Readings will include excerpts from congressional
debates, statutory law, court cases, and presidential
commissions. Also included will be material from classic
writings on bureaucracy (Max Weber, for example, Harold
Laski, Woodrow Wilson, Carl Friedrich, Leonard White,
Sidney Finer and Edward Corwin) along with more contemporary
academic writings and political-social commentary.

EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS

Research paper.

ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS and/or COMMENTS

COURSE FORMAT: Discussion Seminar

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Level: UG Credit: 1.00 Gen Ed Area & Dept: SBS GOVT

Prerequisites: GOVT151 or GOVT201 or GOVT219

Last Updated on MAR-22-1999




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