Building a Legislative-Centered Public Administration Building a Legislative-Centered Public Administration

Building a Legislative-Centered Public Administration

Congress and the Administrative State, 1946-1999

    • £19.99
    • £19.99

Publisher Description

2001 Louis Brownlow Award from the National Academy of Public Administration

Explains the reasons behind Congress’s expanded role in the federal government, its underlying coherence, and its continuing significance for those who study and practice public administration

Before 1946 the congressional role in public administration had been limited to authorization, funding, and review of federal administrative operations, which had grown rapidly as a result of the New Deal and the Second World War. But in passing the Administrative Procedure Act and the Legislative Reorganization Act that pivotal year, Congress self-consciously created for itself a comprehensive role in public administration. Reluctant to delegate legislative authority to federal agencies, Congress decided to treat the agencies as extensions of itself and established a framework for comprehensive regulation of the agencies’ procedures. Additionally, Congress reorganized itself so it could provide continuous supervision of federal agencies.

Rosenbloom shows how these 1946 changes in the congressional role in public administration laid the groundwork for future major legislative acts, including the Freedom of Information Act (1966), Privacy Act (1974), Government in the Sunshine Act (1976), Paperwork Reduction Acts (1980, 1995), Chief Financial Officers Act (1990), and Small Business Regulatory Fairness Enforcement Act (1996). Each of these acts, and many others, has contributed to the legislative-centered public administration that Congress has formed over the past 50 years.

This first book-length study of the subject provides a comprehensive explanation of the institutional interests, values, and logic behind the contemporary role of Congress in federal administration and attempts to move the public administration field beyond condemning legislative “micromanagement” to understanding why Congress values it.

GENRE
Politics & Current Affairs
RELEASED
2015
20 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
224
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Alabama Press
SIZE
1.3
MB

More Books Like This

The Unwieldy American State The Unwieldy American State
2012
5 Steps to a 5: 500 AP U.S. Government and Politics Questions to Know by Test Day, Third Edition 5 Steps to a 5: 500 AP U.S. Government and Politics Questions to Know by Test Day, Third Edition
2022
James Monroe, John Marshall and ‘The Excellence of Our Institutions’, 1817–1825 James Monroe, John Marshall and ‘The Excellence of Our Institutions’, 1817–1825
2022
Government in the United States, National, State and Local Government in the United States, National, State and Local
2018
5 Steps to a 5: 500 AP U.S. Government and Politics Questions to Know by Test Day, Second Edition 5 Steps to a 5: 500 AP U.S. Government and Politics Questions to Know by Test Day, Second Edition
2018
5 Steps to a 5: AP U.S. Government & Politics 2021 5 Steps to a 5: AP U.S. Government & Politics 2021
2020

More Books by David Rosenbloom