ID | 133658 |
Title Proper | America in decay |
Other Title Information | the sources of political dysfunction |
Language | ENG |
Author | Fukuyama, Francis |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The problems with American politics today stem from the basic design of U.S. political institutions, exacerbated by increasingly hostile polarization. Unfortunately, absent some sort of major external shock, the decay is likely to continue for the foreseeable future. The creation of the U.S. Forest Service at the turn of the twentieth century was the premier example of American state building during the Progressive Era. Prior to the passage of the Pendleton Act in 1883, public offices in the United States had been allocated by political parties on the basis of patronage. The Forest Service, in contrast, was the prototype of a new model of merit-based bureaucracy. It was staffed with university-educated agronomists and foresters chosen on the basis of competence and technical expertise, and its defining struggle was the successful effort by its initial leader, Gifford Pinchot, to secure bureaucratic autonomy and escape routine interference by Congress. At the time, the idea that forestry professionals, rather than politicians, should manage public lands and handle the department's staffing was revolutionary, but it was vindicated by the service's impressive performance. Several major academic studies have treated its early decades as a classic case of successful public administration. |
`In' analytical Note | Foreign Affairs Vol.93, No.5; Sep-Oct.2014: p.5-26 |
Journal Source | Foreign Affairs Vol.93, No.5; Sep-Oct.2014: p.5-26 |
Key Words | American Politics ; Foreseeable Future ; United States - US ; U.S. Political Institutions ; Pendleton Act - 1883 ; Political Parties ; Bureaucracy ; Bureaucratic Autonomy ; Gifford Pinchot ; Public Administration ; Progressive Era ; History - United States ; Hostile Polarization |