In this Book

The Intellectual Crisis in American Public Administration

Book
2014
summary

Rethinking governance: Where democracy meets administration.

This revised and expanded third edition extends Ostrom’s analysis to account for the most resent developments in American politics, including those of the Clinton and Bush administrations.

First published in 1973, The Intellectual Crisis in American Public Administration remains one of the most influential critiques of the administrative state. Vincent Ostrom examines the intellectual roots of American public administration, questioning whether centralized bureaucratic systems align with the constitutional principles of self-governance. Through a rigorous analysis of institutional design, federalism, and public choice theory, Ostrom advocates for polycentric governance—an approach that empowers citizens and decentralizes authority. This seminal work continues to inspire debates on accountability, legitimacy, and the future of democratic administration.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title page, Copyright, Dedication

Contents

pp. ix-x

Foreword

pp. xi-xix

Preface to the Third Edition

pp. xxi-xxx

1. The Crisis of Confidence

pp. 1-19

2. The Intellectual Mainstream in American Public Administration

pp. 20-41

3. The Work of the Contemporary Political Economists

pp. 42-64

4. A Theory of Democratic Administration: The Rejected Alternative

pp. 65-86

5. The Choice of Alternative Futures

pp. 87-115

6. The Continuing Constitutional Crises in American Government

pp. 116-145

7. Intellectual Crises and Beyond

pp. 146-182

Notes

pp. 183-203

References

pp. 204-224

Index

pp. 225-230
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