STILL THE CENTURY OF BUREAUCRACY?: THE ROLES OF PUBLIC SERVANTS

Authors

  • B. Guy Peters University of Pittsburgh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5755/j01.ppaa.0.30.26904

Keywords:

public servant, bureaucrat, manager, governance

Abstract

The civil service, and public employment more generally, is often seen as stable,
predictable, and frankly rather boring. The public bureaucrat has been, and continues
to be, an object of scorn as well as an easy target for humorists, and the task of
implementing public policy continues to be seen as largely the same as it has been
for decades or even centuries. Despite that apparent predictability, the job of the
civil servant, as well as much of the environment within which he or she functions,
has been transforming rapidly and the public sector is nothing like it was several
decades ago. Intellectually, the consideration of public administration has also remained
rather stable. Despite numerous changes in the public sector Max Weber’s
conceptions of bureaucracy still constitute the starting point for most discussions
(Derlien, 1999).

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Published

2009-12-29

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Section

Articles