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Chapter 9: The Bureaucracy

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an organization characterized by hierarchical structure, worker specialization, explicit rules, and advancement by merit
the principle that bureaucracy should be depoliticized by making it more professional
the 19th century practice of firing government workers of a defeated party and replacing them with loyalists of the victorious party
system in which a successful candidate rewards friends, contributors, and party loyalists for their support with jobs, contracts, and favors
nonmilitary employees of the government who are appointed through the merit system
1883 civil service reform that required the hiring and promoting of civil servants to be based on merit, not patronage
1939 law limiting the political involvement of civil servants in order to protect them from political pressure and keep politics out of bureaucracy
the principle that bureaucratic employees should be answerable for their performance to supervisors, all the way up the chain of command
the complex procedures and regulations surrounding bureaucratic activity
groups of citizens whose interests are affected by an agency or a department and who work to influence its politcs
one of the major subdivisions of the federal government, represented in the president's cabinet
government organizations independent of the departments but with a narrower policy focus
government organizations that regulate various businesses, industries, or economic sectors
limitations or restrictions on the activities of a business or individual
companies created by Congress to provide the public a good service that private enterprise cannot or will not profitably provide
bureaucrats' use of their judgment in interpreting and carrying out the laws of Congress
publication containing all federal regulations and notifications of regulatory agency hearings
the accepted values and procedures of an organization
the often unintelligible language used by bureaucrats to avoid controversy and lend weight to their words
individuals who publicize instances of fraud, corruption, or other wrongdoing in the bureaucracy
process whereby regulatory agencies come to be protective of and influenced by the industries they were established to regulate
the phenomenon of a clientele group, congressional committee, and bureaucratic agency cooperating to make mutually beneficial policy
complex systems of relationships among groups that influence policy, including elected leaders, interest groups, specialists, consultants, and research institutes
citizen groups that consider that consider the policy decisions of an agency; a way to make the bureaucracy responsive to the general public
legislation opening the process of bureaucratic policymaking to the public
1966 law that allows citizens to obtain copies of most public records
a law that gives citizens access to the government's files on them

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