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Clifford Dwight Waldo (September 28, 1913 – October 27, 2000) was an American political scientist and is perhaps the defining figure in modern public administration.[1] Waldo's career was often directed against a scientific/technical portrayal of bureaucracy and government that now suggests the term public management as opposed to public administration.[2] Waldo is recognized the world over for his contributions to the theory of bureaucratic government.
Dwight Waldo | |
---|---|
Born | De Witt, Nebraska, U.S. | September 28, 1913
Died | October 27, 2000 87) | (aged
Alma mater | University of Nebraska Yale University |
Known for | Theory of Bureaucratic Government |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Public administration |
Institutions | University of California, Berkeley Syracuse University Virginia Tech |
Thesis | The Administrative State (1948) |
Doctoral advisor | Francis Coker |
Born in rural DeWitt, Nebraska, and trained first in a local Wesleyan college and then a Nebraska normal school as a teacher, Waldo was eventually educated in political theory at the University of Nebraska (MA) and Yale University (PhD) where he was advised by Francis Coker.[3]
He came to shape much of the future of scholarship in the field of Public Administration.[citation needed] His Yale dissertation was reworked after civil service during World War II into a classic work[citation needed] of public administration called The Administrative State, published in 1948. Waldo challenged mainstream scholars' view of public administration as a value-free, non-partisan social science that promised to make government more efficient and effective. Professor Camilla Stivers has observed, "Despite public administration's claim to be a science, Waldo declares, it is a political theory [....] Political theory looks to error in the world and aims to envision new possibilities. It is critical rather than objective, suggestive rather than conclusive."[4] In short, "efficiency" itself is a value, and it can run counter to other values, such as democratic participation in governance.
Waldo also is famous for the debate he had with Herbert A. Simon on the nature of bureaucracy in American Political Science Review just after World War II. Eventually he taught at the University of California, Berkeley and the Maxwell School at Syracuse University,[5] and Virginia Tech where he influenced many future scholars of government. He had profound influence on a number of young academics in the late 1960s by organizing the Minnowbrook Conference.[6][7] Others deeply indebted to Waldo for guidance and sponsorship include H. George Frederickson and Gary Wamsley.[citation needed]
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