Affiliation:
1. University of Oklahoma
Abstract
Three successive terms of market-oriented presidents raise difficulties for federal bureaucrats in legitimating past administrative doctrine and practices, which were government-centered. The present article responds to Charles Levine's call for a new administrative doctrine that is more fully descriptive of the needs and routines of today's federal civil servants than a doctrine based on either a liberal or neo-conservative ideology. The author introduces the concept of doctrine into public administration discourse in order to clarify the differences in ideology, doctrine, and practices between an era of top-down liberal progressivism and the era of bottom-up neo-conservative progressivism that dawned with the first Reagan administration. The purpose is to take a first step in describing emerging administrative realities that both traditional bureaucrats and free-marketeers must recognize.
Subject
Marketing,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science
Reference32 articles.
1. Apple, R. W.
(1989, May 25). The capital: How long can Bush continue to speak in timid cliches while the world of totalitarianism shakes? The New York Times (national ed.). p. 16.
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6 articles.
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