List of Public Administration Scholars Administration Scholars
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List of public administration scholars https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_public_ administration_scholars From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This is an incomplete list that may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it withreliably sourced entries. This list of public administration scholars includes notable theorists, academics, and researchers from public administration, public policy, and related fields such as economics, political science, management, administrative law. All of the individuals in this list have made a notable contribution to the field of public administration. O. P. Dwivedi Howard E. McCurdy Graham T. Allison Kenneth J. Meier Paul Appleby Robert K. Merton Walter Bagehot Henry Mintzberg Chester Barnard Mark H. Moore Reinhard Bendix Frederick C. Mosher James M. Buchanan R. E. Neustadt Lynton K. Caldwell W. A. Niskanen - Founded the rational choice analysing bureaucracy. Michel Crozier Johan Olsen - One of the developers of the systemic-anarchic Robert A. Dahl perspective of organizational decision making known as the Can Model. A.V. Dicey Elinor Ostrom Anthony Downs - Had a major influence on the public choiceschool of political economy. C. Northcote Parkinson - Author of Parkinson's Law satirizes government bureaucracies and explains the inevitability of bureaucratic expansion. Peter Drucker James L. Perry Patrick Dunleavy - Originated the bureau-shaping model ofbureaucracy. Gerrit van Poelje - Founder of the science of public administration in the Netherlands. Dorman Bridoman Eaton Jack Rabin David John Farmer - Author of The Language of Public Administration, listed as one of the candidate books for “great books of public administration, 1990-2010” (Meier & O’Toole, 2012, Hal G. Rainey p. 890).[1][2] Ken Rasmussen Henri Fayol Emmette Redford James W. Fesler R. A. W. Rhodes Mary Parker Follett Norma M. Riccucci H. George Frederickson John A. Rohr Louis C. Gawthrop David H. Rosenbloom Frank J. Goodnow - Father of American Public Administration. S.N. Sadasivan Charles Goodsell Allen Schick Luther Gulick Philip Selznick Friedrich Hayek - Thought that socialism required central Patricia M. Shields economic planning and that such planning in turn had a risk of leading towards totalitarianism. Herbert A. Simon Hugh Heclo Theda Skocpol E. Pendleton Herring Stephen Skowronek Otto Hintze Lorenz von Stein - Founder of the science of public administration in Europe. Ralph P. Hummel Richard J. Stillman II Patricia Ingraham Camilla Stivers Barry Dean Karl Joseph R. Strayer V.O. Key, Jr. Frederick W. Taylor Harold Laski Alain Touraine Harold Lasswell Thomas Frederick Tout Charles E. Lindblom - One of the early developers and advocates of the theory of incrementalism in policy and decision-making. Paul P. Van Riper Michael Lipsky - Did research on the phenomenon of street-level Dwight Waldo bureaucracy. Gary Wamsley Norton E. Long Kenneth F. Warren Theodore J. Lowi Niklas Luhmann Max Weber - Did research on bureaucracy James March - One of the developers of the systemic-anarchic Leonard D. White perspective of organizational decision making known as theGarbage Can Model. Aaron Wildavsky Karl Marx - Believed that government is controlled by those with William F. Willoughby the most influence on the economy. James Q. Wilson Renate Mayntz Woodrow Wilson - Founder of the science of public administration in the United States. Deil S. Wright Suggested reading[edit] Smith, Kevin B. and Licari, Michael J. Public Administration — Power and Politics in the Fourth Branch of Government, ISBN 1-933220-04-X References[edit] 1. Jump up ^ Meier, Kenneth & Lawrence O’Toole (2012). Influence: What kind? And How to know? Administration and Society 44(7): 888-893 2. Jump up ^ Farmer, David John (1995). The Language of Public Administration: Bureaucracy, Modernity and Postmodernity, Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press.