Cameralism, as a set if ideas, refers to a system of “sciences” whose professors, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, recorded and attempted to extend and improve administrative practices to serve the absolutist monarchs of Germany and Austria. This article examines some of the major themes of cameralist political and social thought. Particular attention is paid here to cameralist writings about the nature of the state, the value of science, and the power of the executive. It is concluded here that the cameralists sounded themes that continue to resonate in much of modern American public administration, but that these themes may not be as relevant to a constitutional republic as they were to the absolutist regimes of Germany an...
A Transatlantic History of Public Administration Intellectual traditions are commonly regarded as cu...
In one sense, the debate over the Constitution of 1787 amounted to a battle to determine the true he...
The Constitutional School of public administration (notably Rohr 1986) is vulnerable to attacks beca...
Cameralism, as a set if ideas, refers to a system of “sciences” whose professors, during the sevente...
Probing the relationship between German political economy and everyday fiscal administration, The Di...
The analysis of Cameralism attempted in this paper is meant to provide ideas for an effective regula...
Public administration writers, with some notable exceptions, generally have not paid a great deal of...
This article discusses the political and administrative ideas of Frederick the Great, as expressed i...
In this critical examination of public administration\u27s pervasive vision of a powerful state, Spi...
Cameralism and the Enlightenment reassesses the relationship between two key phenomena of European h...
This chapter provides an overview of the transfer of ideas between German, French, and U.S. Public A...
The seminal work of Johann Caspar Bluntschli, a Swiss-born and German-trained scholar of public admi...
Public management is ensconced in the intellectued tradition of public administration. [1] The brief...
This essay sets out a new method for the history of ideas. Using a mixed approach combining computer...
The Age of Enlightenment was full of critical class struggle and serious social and political change...
A Transatlantic History of Public Administration Intellectual traditions are commonly regarded as cu...
In one sense, the debate over the Constitution of 1787 amounted to a battle to determine the true he...
The Constitutional School of public administration (notably Rohr 1986) is vulnerable to attacks beca...
Cameralism, as a set if ideas, refers to a system of “sciences” whose professors, during the sevente...
Probing the relationship between German political economy and everyday fiscal administration, The Di...
The analysis of Cameralism attempted in this paper is meant to provide ideas for an effective regula...
Public administration writers, with some notable exceptions, generally have not paid a great deal of...
This article discusses the political and administrative ideas of Frederick the Great, as expressed i...
In this critical examination of public administration\u27s pervasive vision of a powerful state, Spi...
Cameralism and the Enlightenment reassesses the relationship between two key phenomena of European h...
This chapter provides an overview of the transfer of ideas between German, French, and U.S. Public A...
The seminal work of Johann Caspar Bluntschli, a Swiss-born and German-trained scholar of public admi...
Public management is ensconced in the intellectued tradition of public administration. [1] The brief...
This essay sets out a new method for the history of ideas. Using a mixed approach combining computer...
The Age of Enlightenment was full of critical class struggle and serious social and political change...
A Transatlantic History of Public Administration Intellectual traditions are commonly regarded as cu...
In one sense, the debate over the Constitution of 1787 amounted to a battle to determine the true he...
The Constitutional School of public administration (notably Rohr 1986) is vulnerable to attacks beca...