America'sDepartmentsof State: Irregular and Regular Syndromes of Policy Making
- 1 December 1981
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 75 (4) , 911-927
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1962292
Abstract
This article (1) sketches a general explanation for the growth of coordinative machinery and of irregular personnel in modern governments; (2) identifies both general and specific reasons for this phenomenon in the United States with special reference to foreign policy making; (3) identifies within the American foreign policy-making context the modal characteristics of irregular and regular syndromes of policy making, and the conjunction between personnel and institutional base; (4) traces the implications arising from these different policy syndromes; and (5) evaluates some proposals for improving the coherence and knowledge base of American foreign policy making. The problems of defining foreign policy authority, assuring an integrated perspective, and effectively using specialized expertise are best seen in terms of the larger problem of governance in Washington against which all proposals for reform must be abraded.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Toward Presidential Control of the State DepartmentForeign Affairs, 1979
- White House Watching: Policy, Organization & Ideology among Contemporary PresidentsThe Premise and the Performance: The Leadership of John F. Kennedy. By Lewis J. Paper Pragmatic Illusions: The Presidential Politics of John F. Kennedy. By Bruce Miroff The Plot That Failed: Nixon and the Administrative Presidency. By Richard P. Nathan Organizing the Presidency. By Stephen HessPolity, 1978
- In This IssuePolicy & Politics, 1977
- Advice and Dissent in British Government: The Case of the Special AdvisersPolicy & Politics, 1977
- Politics and the Career Mobility of BureaucratsAmerican Political Science Review, 1974
- Bureaucratic politics and American foreign policy: A critiquePolicy Sciences, 1973
- Planning and the Federal Chancellor's Office in the West German Federal GovernmentPolitical Studies, 1973
- Rejoinder to “Comment” by I. M. DestlerAmerican Political Science Review, 1972
- Comment: Multiple Advocacy: Some “Limits and Costs”American Political Science Review, 1972
- Social Theory and Social StructureThe American Catholic Sociological Review, 1958