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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. Of all the provocative topics pertaining to political administration and policy-making, perhaps none is as incendiary as the long-standing debate over which model represents the most appropriate approach for government to take. Examining both the bureaucratic and classic models provides a wholly opposing look at the direction from which the administrative process has been – and continues to be – run. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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File: LM1_TLCBureauM.rtf
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Examining both the bureaucratic and classic models provides a wholly opposing look at the direction from which the administrative process has been - and continues to be - run.
Daniel McCools article entitled The Theoretical Foundation of Policy Studies discusses how a major approach to the study of American public administration concerns the notion of the politics/administrative dichotomy, the
key components of which consist of the desire to maintain political and administrative representatives as separate entities via the classic model. Followed back to a popular 1920-1940 trend in
public administration known as scientific management, the politics/administrative dichotomy was set in motion as a means by which to bring back a positive and beneficial feel to politics and policy
making. According to McCool (1995), "...theory is nothing more than a tool - a strategic device - to increase understanding. Policy theory is a servant to our thoughts,
a guide to the universe of human behavior in a political setting" (McCool, 1995, p. 20). When assessing the inherent value of a
separation between politics and administration to the theoretical foundation of policy via the classic model, one must first understand the impact such policy has made in past Unites States administrative
history, an impact that some contend has been the saving grace of the American democratic system. The very principles behind the politics/administrative dichotomy are those that lend to the
notion of democracy. Indeed, the separation that exists between politics and administration is a necessary component to the perpetuation of democratic government, inasmuch as the quest for autonomy has
the potential to overshadow what is best for the greater good. As Bargen (2000) duly notes, "the field of public administration today is home to a variety of opinions
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