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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 8 page research paper that discusses the federal bureaucracy. The federal bureaucracy is a feature of American twenty-first century society that has grown and changed tremendously since the country's inception. This examination of the federal bureaucracy first looks at its history and how it came to be, as well as its structure and various functions, before examining a quantitative research study that suggests how the nature federal bureaucracy has changed since World War II. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khfedb.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of bureaus, office and/or departments who are staffed by non-elected officials. The federal bureaucracy refers to the megalithic monstrosity of offices, administration, and bureaus that primarily encompassed within the workings
of the executive branch. These are the bureaucrats who keep the U.S. federal government running in all of its various guises and permutations. The federal bureaucracy is a feature
of American twenty-first century society that has grown and changed tremendously since the countrys inception. The following examination of the federal bureaucracy first looks at its history and how it
came to be, as well as its structure and various functions, before examining a quantitative research study that suggests how the nature federal bureaucracy has changed since World War
II. The history of the federal bureaucracy When George Washington became the countrys first president in 1789, he headed a federal bureaucracy that had just three departments, which
were the Departments of State, War and the Treasury (Federal Bureaucracy). As needs arose, they were met by expanding the bureaucracy to address them. In general the federal bureaucracy grew
to meet the needs of national crises. For example, the Civil War permanently changed the face of the federal bureaucracy as thousands of jobs and employees were added in
order to coordinate the Union war effort (Federal Bureaucracy) It was in the nineteenth century that Western democracies began to develop a professional and permanent bureaucracy. The idea
was advanced in Europe that the expanding role of government necessitated professional bureaucrats in order for government to meet the demands of an industrialized society (Bureaucracy). In the U.S., the
shift from a patronage system to a "professional, merit-based bureaucracy" ran into difficulty, as the idea that government services required "special skills, talents or education" was rejected by the supporters
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