Results 251 to 260 of about 76,302 (306)
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From bureaucratic to post‐bureaucratic: the difficulties of transition

Journal of Organizational Change Management, 2006
PurposeModern bureaucracies are under reconstruction, bureaucracy being no longer “modern”; they are becoming “post” bureaucratic. Defining the post‐bureaucratic organization as a hybrid form provides insight into the intrinsic difficulties involved in the refurbishment of large complex organizations.
Josserand, E., Teo, Stephen, Clegg, S.
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The Bureaucrat

JAMA, 1975
America's dim view of the bureaucrat needs reassessment because professional standards review organizations (PSROs) and national health insurance will increase the amount of contact between physician and bureaucrat. Inevitable conflict between The Organization and the physician is aggravated by the government-business adversary relationship based on ...
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Bureaucrats and Politicians

The Journal of Law and Economics, 1975
FIVE years ago I completed the manuscript that was published as Bureaucracy and Representative Government.2 This book-an attempt to match a now conventional theory of the demand for government services in a representative government with a new theory of bureaucratic supplyprovoked a minor stir, some misunderstanding, and some useful subsequent research.
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Bureaucratic Civilization:

2019
This chapter shows how Europe's colonial expansion and imperial economic exploitation contributed to the rise of European middle classes and at the same time shaped European bourgeois culture and values. It points out that Britain's nineteenth-century middle class was as much a product of imperial expansion and the integration of global markets as it ...
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Utility maximizing bureaucrats: The bureaucrat's point of view

Public Choice, 1995
In this paper we develop a model to examine the extent to which bureaucrats are maximizing their own utility. In the spirit of Williamson (1964) and Simon (1957), we assume that bureaucrats are utility maximizers but not necessarily cost minimizers and we investigate how well the bureaucrat is doing in relation to his own goals.
K. Hayes, L. L. Wood
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Bureaucrats

Medical Journal of Australia, 1986
Brian Gaynor, P.J. Christopher
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Bureaucrats, Politicians, and the Politics of Bureaucratic Autonomy

2017
Bureaucratic actors are located at the center of social policymaking. The chapter illustrates the relevance of conflicts of interests between fiscal bureaucrats and social bureaucrats and politicians, showing that where these conflicts are intense neoliberal reforms may be blocked or muted, at least for a time.
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The Bureaucrats

2018
This chapter looks at how bureaucrats shape the criminal justice relationship between Australia and Indonesia in the context of cooperation between their national police forces. Adapting Mathieu Deflem’s theory of bureaucratic autonomy, it argues that the close cooperation between the Australian and Indonesian police since the late 1990s is due to ...
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Bureaucratization

2004
Bureaucracy, or bureaucratization, refers to routinized, deper-sonalized, and dispersed processes devoted to the execution of a variety of administrative tasks, and to the regulation and assessment of these tasks. Within a bureaucratic system of governance, authority is dispersed and disconnected from ownership or physical production.
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OHP: Bureaucratizing Sportsmedicine

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1980
Federal grant authorizations for sportsmedicine research haven't been funded yet, and there's nothing HEW's Office of Health Promotion can do but wait.
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