FACTOID # 106: Americans are 15% more innovative than the Japanese. But in percentage terms, the Japanese grant 3.5 times more patents.
 
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Encyclopedia > Bureaucrat

A bureaucrat is a member of a bureaucracy, usually within an institution of the government. Bureaucracy is a concept in sociology and political science referring to the way that the administrative execution and enforcement of legal rules is socially organized. ...


The term "bureaucrat" today has largely negative connotations, so those who are the members of a governmental bureaucracy usually prefer terms such as civil servant or public servant to describe their jobs. The negative connotation is fueled by the perception that bureaucrats work inefficiently, lack creativity, are unmotivated, and are unresponsive to constituent needs. Wikipedia does not yet have an article with this exact name. ...


Bureaucrat jobs are usually "desk jobs" (the French for desk being bureau), often of a clerical or organizational nature.


Max Weber defined a bureaucratic official as follows: Maximilian Weber (IPA: ) (April 21, 1864 – June 14, 1920) was a German political economist and sociologist who is considered one of the founders of the modern study of sociology and public administration. ...

  • He is personally free and appointed to his position on the basis of conduct
  • He exercises the authority delegated to him in accordance with impersonal rules, and his loyalty is enlisted on behalf of the faithful execution of his official duties
  • His appointment and job placement are dependent upon his technical qualifications
  • His administrative work is a full-time occupation
  • His work is rewarded by a regular salary and prospects of advancement in a lifetime career
  • He must exercise his judgment and his skills, but his duty is to place these at the service of a higher authority. Ultimately he is responsible only for the impartial execution of assigned tasks and must sacrifice his personal judgment if it runs counter to his official duties.
  • Bureaucratic control is the use of rules, regulations, and formal authority to guide performance. It includes such things as budgets, statistical reports, and performance appraisals to regulate behavior and results.

Bureaucrats of the EU are frequently termed eurocrats in the English language in Europe - a portmanteau of European Union (or Europe) and bureaucrat. Look up Portmanteau word in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...


Bureaucrats in Fiction

Hermes Conrad is a grade 36 (and later 37) bureaucrat from Jamaica from the TV show Futurama. As the show is set in the 31st century, the premise gives the writers leeway to include mathematical jokes about the progression to more bureaucracy, to the point where people literally spend their whole lifetimes waiting in line. As for Hermes, he manages the Planet Express delivery business with responsibilities that include paying bills, giving out legal waivers, frequently admonishing the staff for not working hard enough, and notifying next of kin. In direct contrast to most stereotypical portrayals of Jamaicans, he is an uptight workaholic (Hermes claims he is anal 78.36% of the time). This was noticed already when he was 4, when a hurricane hit Kingston, leaving Hermes in despair, for it threw his alphabet blocks out of order. Hermes Conrad is a character in the Futurama animated series. ... See TV (disambiguation) for other uses and Television (band) for the rock band European networks National In much of Europe television broadcasting has historically been state dominated, rather than commercially organised, although commercial stations have grown in number recently. ... Futurama is an American animated sitcom that follows Philip J. Fry after he is cryogenically frozen at midnight, December 31, 1999, and is revived a thousand years later in the year 2999. ... The 31st century (Gregorian Calendar) comprises the years 3001–3100. ... The City of Kingston is the capital and largest city of Jamaica. ...


External links

  • John Kilcullen, Lecture -- Max Weber: On Bureaucracy
  • Michael Link, In Defense of Mandarins
  • Ludwig von Mises, Bureaucracy
  • "You Who are the Bureaucrats of Empire, Remember Who We Are" by Don Mitchell

See also: Apparatchik, Mandarin. See Apparatchik (disambiguation) for other meanings. ... A Mandarin was a bureaucrat in imperial China. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Bureaucratic collectivism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (599 words)
Bureaucratic collectivism is a theory of class society.
However, Trotsky doubted that a state of pure bureaucratic collectivism would ever be reached; he believed that, in the absence of a proletarian revolution to return the Soviet Union to socialism, a comprehensive counter-revolution would return the nation to capitalism instead.
The theory of bureaucratic collectivism was maintained by socialists such as Hal Draper, and is now held by sections of Solidarity in the USA and Workers Liberty in the United Kingdom and Australia.
Bureaucracy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2524 words)
This is the subject of Marxist theories of bureaucratic collectivism.
Central to the Marxian concept of socialism is the idea of workers' self-management, which assumes the internalisation of a morality and self-discipline among people that would make bureaucratic supervision and control redundant, together with a drastic reorganisation of the division of labour in society.
Because bureaucrats have more information than elected officials about what they are doing and what they should be doing, bureaucrats might have the ability to implement policies or regulations that go against the public interest.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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