Title: Governmental and Administrative Structures
1Governmental and Administrative Structures
2Outline
- I. What is the Context in Which Public
Organizations Operate - II. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and the Executive - III. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and the Legislature
3Outline
- IV. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and the Judiciary - V. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and Other Interested Parties - VI. Organizational Resources and Issues
4I. What is the Context in Which Public
Organizations Operate
- A. What is Context?
- Context is not merely physical, it includes the.
- beliefs and values that shape our expectations of
public organizations - as well as the structures we have developed to
try and maintain those values.
5Kaufman
- This author argues that the administrative
history of our governmental machinery can by
captured by change in emphasis among 3 values -
representativeness, political neutral competence,
and executive leadership
6Kaufman
- For this author, group discontent is the dynamic
force that motivates the quest for new forms of
administration at particular points in time,
enough people will be persuaded by one another of
these discontents to support remedial action
7Kaufman
- During the time the author was writing, he noted
that most people were dissatisfied with the
representativeness of the process he argued that
the solution would be greater decentralization of
power to lower levels of government
8- B. What are the Features of U.S Context?
- Complex due to founding fathers fear of
concentrated power - Â Hamilton/Federalists strong, centralized
government staffed by men of wealth, class and
education reflects distrust of the people - Jefferson/Anti-Federalists saw administration as
linked to the issue of extending democracy - more
decentralized approach with controls on the
executive
9II. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and the Executive
- A. Administrative Organizations
- Â Executive Office of the President (Office of
Management and Budget National Security Council
Council of Economic Advisors) advises and assists
the President in formulating and implementing
national policy - Cabinet Level Executive DepartmentsDOD HHS
Treasury Agriculture Interior Transportation
Justice Commerce State Labor Energy HUD
Education Veterans Affairs, Homeland Security - Independent agencies, regulatory commissions, and
public corporations - Government Printing Office, Library of Congress,
General Accounting Office
10II. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and the Executive
- B. Tools for executive control over
administrative organizations - Â
- Executive orderpresidential mandate directed to
and governing, with the effect of law, the
actions of government officials and agencies - Veto
- Â
- Political appointees
11III. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and the Legislature
- A.    Structural control mechanisms
-
- Legislative vetoany action proposed by the
executive or agency under provisions of a
particular piece of legislation is subject to the
approval or disapproval of Congress, usually
within 30 to 90 days (declared unconstitutional
in Chadha (1983) but still used) - Sunset lawsused to assess the performance of
agencies and to eliminate those that are not
successful specify life span for program and
require renewal for continuation - Sunshine lawsrequire agencies to conduct work in
public view
12III. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and the Legislature
- B. Supervisory control mechanisms
- Oversightcommittee with jurisdiction over
particular agencies hearings CBO GAO - Caseworkusing agencies to meet constituent needs
13IV. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and the Judiciary
- Rulemaking-concerned with establishing general
guidelines that would apply to a class of people
or a class of actions in the future - Governed by the Administrative Procedures Act
seeks to insure that rules are based on proper
legal authority, that there are both adequate
notice of the rule making and an opportunity for
citizens to be heard, that the rule is clear and
unambiguous, and that people are given sufficient
advance warning that the new rule will take
affect
14- Negotiated rulemaking - an alternative means of
dispute resolution that would not require formal
legal process - Brings together interested parties and try to
arrive at consensus
15- Adjudication- desire to see that citizens are
treated fairly and are not subjected to arbitrary
decisions
16Rules vs Standards Debate
- Here is the rules and standards debate in a
nutshell. Law translates background social
policies or political principles such as truth,
fairness, efficiency, autonomy, and democracy
into a grid of legal directives that decision
makers in turn apply to particular cases and
facts. - These mediating legal directives take different
forms that vary in the relative discretion they
afford the decision maker. - These forms can be classified as either rules or
standards to signify where they fall on the
continuum of discretion. - Rules, once formulated, afford decision makers
less discretion that do standards
17V. What is the Relationship Between Public
Organizations and Other Interested Parties
- Political appointee connectionfriction tends to
exist between the executives appointed by elected
officials and the government employees they are
supposed to lead - Â Client connectiontop administrators are quite
sensitive to the dominant interests or clients
they represent - Â Cognate agency connectionrelated or connected
seldom one agency alone involved in policy
jurisdictional and mission overlap - Â Media connectionbetter relations with press,
more successful policy makers are in doing their
job, easy to understand, cover and report - Â Activist connectionno organization is safe from
the wrath of activists groups demonstrations,
boycotts,
18VI. Organizational Resources and Issues
- Â A. Resources Denhardt
- Staff (expertise) legislation is vague giving
discretion to the administration political clout - External-public opinion, support from clientele
groups, members of the legislature, others in
executive branch - Internal-information, expertise, cohesion,
leadership
19Resources cont
- Starling
- Resources, external support (strength/size,
dispersion, unity) - Professionalism,
- Leadership-basis of power
20- Coercive power-ability to threaten punishment and
deliver penalties magnitude of punishment real
or imagined, other party's estimate of the
probability the leader will mete out punishment - Connection power-personal ties with important
people inside and outside an organization - Expert power-reputation for special knowledge,
expertise, or skills in a given area - Dependence power-peoples perception that they are
dependent on the leader either for help or for
protection - Obligation power-efforts to do favors for people
who they expect will feel an obligation to return
those favors - Legitimate power-formal position held by the
leader - Referent power-identification of others with the
leader-liked, admired, respected - Reward power-ability to make followers believe
that compliance with the leaders wishes will lead
to pay, promotion, recognition, or other rewards
21B. Costs
- Every important administrative action has
indirect costs, externalities, or spillover costs - Who is going to be glad? How glad?
- Who is going to be mad? How mad?
22C. Strategies
- Cooperation 2 groups can share compatible goals
without one having to completely give in to the
other - Persuasion-ability to link behavior wanted to
self-interest of other party - Bargaining-negotiation of an agreement
- Compromise-single, isolated issue, outcome one of
more or less - Logrolling-more than one issue at stake,
reciprocity - Coalition-combination of 2 or more organizations
for a specific purpose - Competition- struggle between 2 or more parties
with a 3rd party mediating--seize the initiation
or co-opting the opposition - Conflict-pursue goals that are fundamentally
incompatible
23Wilson
- Three Key Organizational Issues
- Critical Tasksthose behaviors, which if
performed successfully, enable the organization
to manage its critical environmental problem - Missionagreement and widespread endorsement of
the way the critical task is defined - Autonomysufficient freedom of action and
external political support to permit it to
redefine its tasks as it sees best