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Bureaucracy

Bureaucracy. Max Weber. Bureaucracy. Characteristics of a Bureaucracy Bureaucracy is defined by fixed official jurisdictional areas, ordered by rules, laws, administrative regulations, characterized by: 1. Regular activities , distributed any fixed way as our official duties

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Bureaucracy

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  1. Bureaucracy Max Weber

  2. Bureaucracy • Characteristics of a Bureaucracy • Bureaucracy is defined by fixed official jurisdictional areas, ordered by rules, laws, administrative regulations, characterized by: • 1. Regular activities, distributed any fixed way as our official duties • 2. Authority to give commands is regulated by rules • 3. Duties and responsibilities regulated by qualifications

  3. Bureaucracy • History of Bureaucracies: • Bureaucracies are the historical exception, most organizations in human history were personal in nature. • Personal Power: • In such circumstances, authority is linked to individuals whose power is enforced through personalized administrative structure, which are often embedded into existing cultural practices. • Example: Kings, Monarchs, Feudal Lords, Slave Masters, Elders

  4. Bureaucracy • Bureaucratic Organization: Characteristics • 1. Office Hierarchy: ordered system of subordination, supervision of lower offices. • Issues: legitimate and illegitimate authority, right to appeal, variations based on public or private organizations. • 2. Documentation: rules, and job descriptions are written down, expressly stated. • Issues: distinctions between public/official and private life, workers rights.

  5. Bureaucracy • Bureaucratic Organization: Characteristics • 3. Expert Training: Each According to Their Degree: • 4. Office Operations Delimited by Specific Rules: • 5. Authority is Rules Based: Regulations are not absolute, they are not command-based, but are based on administrative rules.

  6. Bureaucracy • Position of the Official • 1. Office Holding is a Vocation: • Administrative Requirements: • - Specific Training • - Comprehensive Exams • Duty to Vocation: Loyalty to the Profession (The New Master) • -Official Pay, No Renting Seeking (corruption) • - Not Based on Loyalty To a Person

  7. Bureaucracy • Position of the Official: • Example: Political Official • ThePolitical Official is no longer a personal servant to the ruler. Now, they are in the “service of a functional purpose,” a set of written rules, and a professional code of conduct.

  8. Bureaucracy • Position of the Official: Personal Position • Social status: • - advanced education • - specialized skills • - control apparatus of the modern state and corporation (without them chaos would ensue). • -leaders by virtue of specialized knowledge

  9. Bureaucracy • Position of the Official: Appointed v. Elected • Appointed Official: True Bureaucrat • - appointed by superior, specialized authority • - selected because of specialized skills • - satisfied bureaucratic criteria • - authority derived from above • Question: why else might someone be appointed? Nepotism?

  10. Bureaucracy • Position of the Official: Appointed v. Elected • Elected Official: Not a Bureaucrat • - elected by popular vote • - not always selected because of their (bureaucratic) skills • - authority derived from below • Question: who is the better judge, the public (populism) or the specialist (bureaucracy)?

  11. Bureaucracy • Position of the Official: Appointed v. Elected • Elected Official: Not a Bureaucrat • - elected by popular vote • - not always selected because of their (bureaucratic) skills • - authority derived from below • - weakens hierarchy (of skills) • Question: who is the better judge, the public (populism) or the specialist (bureaucracy)? Elected Judges?

  12. Bureaucracy • Position of the Official: Appointed v. Elected • Big-city mayors: Executive Power • - are elected • - to oversee a large specialized staff • - to accomplish more than legislative bodies

  13. Bureaucracy • Position of the Official: Tenure • - rules for duration in office • - protection against arbitrary dismissal • - administrative independence • Questions: Tenure and social status?

  14. Bureaucracy • Technical Advantages of Bureaucratic Organizations • Bureaucratic v. Honorific Organizations Bureaucratic (Vocation) - precise - efficient - continuous - hierarchal - nonpersonal …favored by capitalist economies for its efficiency Honorific (Avocation/Customary) - personal - less efficient - less continuous - expensive - personalized …is administered by notables (non-experts) with limited efficiency.

  15. Bureaucracy • Permanence of bureaucracy: • Once a bureaucracy has been established it is extremely difficult to destroy. • Bureaucracy and Power: Socializing Power Relationships. • Bureaucracies can be used for socializing power relationships. Given their organizational complexity, bureaucracies are difficult to change through mass/public opposition. • Question: Can you fight City Hall?

  16. Bureaucracy • Permanence of bureaucracy: • Bureaucracy: • - fixes the specialist in place (administratively) • - demands/requires that the public abide by its rules • Question: can you change/challenge the RMV?

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