Active Duty: Public Administration as Democratic Statesmanship
Peter Augustine Lawler, Robert M. Schaefer, David L. SchaeferBooks.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.
Overview
In Active Duty: Public Administration as Democratic Statesmanship, a distinguished group of contributors examines the role of the American civil service under the Constitution. The common concern that unites the otherwise diverse approaches of the authors is the conception of public administration as a particular form of political activity. The contributors relate administrative issues to the broader questions of political life, such as political judgment and responsibility, the Constitution and constitutionalism, and the promotion of human liberty and the common good. They aim to encourage the administrator to become a democratic statesman. Present and prospective American civil servants, as well as political scientists and political philosophers, will find this book of interest.
Synopsis
In Active Duty, a distinguished group of contributors examines the role of the American civil service under the Constitution.
Booknews
An introduction to the American civil service that attempts to re-link the concept of public administration to an understanding of it as a particular kind of political activity. Fourteen contributions are organized into sections which explore present-day concerns of public administration such as policy deliberation in the case of global warming, the notion of impartiality, and the impact of Theodore Lowi's The End of Liberalism; constitutional issues including the views of The Federalist and Woodrow Wilson towards the proper place of public administration; and the relationship between public administration and personal responsibility. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.