
- •Historical overview of public administration
- •Business management and public administration
- •Public Administration as an Academic Discipline
- •Some theoretical aspects of public administration
- •The basic aspects of organization theory
- •The environment of public administration
- •Public administration personnel: role-types, role conflicts, role overloads
- •Personnel administration: staffing and training the agency
- •Recruiting
- •Examining and selecting
- •Evaluation
- •Continuing education in the public service
- •Promotion of public administration personnel
- •Or the Peter Principle
- •Four processes of decision-making
- •Information search
- •Models of decision-making
- •The relation between policy, administration, and leadership
- •Vocabulary Unit 1
- •Implement (n)
- •Implement (V)
- •Implementation (n)
- •Institution (n)
- •Insure (V)
- •Insurance (n)
- •Industry (n)
- •Value (n)
- •Value (V)
- •Independence (n)
- •Interdependence (n)
- •Identify (V)
- •Identity (n)
- •Initiate (V)
- •Initiate (n)
- •Initiate (adj)
- •Interfere (V)
- •Interference (n)
- •Intelligence (n)
- •Intelligent (adj)
- •Inaction (n)
- •Value (n)
- •Value (V)
- •Influence (n)
- •Influence (V)
- •Impoverish (V)
The relation between policy, administration, and leadership
A public manager cannot pursue a leadership approach independent of existing policy.
Having established mission and goals, the manager may still need some new policies. Similarly, adopting a leadership strategy does not mean that the agency head can ignore administrative systems. They are critical for any organization. But they do not come first. But to make the existing administrative structure achieve the policy, a public administrator needs a leadership strategy.
(Abridged from: Behn, Robert D. Leadership Counts, pp. 207-208).
GORBACHEV’S LEADERSHIP
Gorbachev entered Communist Party work as a bureaucrat at age 24. He became chairman of the USSR Supreme Soviet in October 1988.
Gorbachev then introduced a presidential system that culminated in the new office of President of the USSR established in March 1990. The new presidency was created by a simple amendment to the Soviet Constitution of 1977, the fourth Soviet constitution.
Gorbachev established an unusual and unwieldy legislative structure. In place of the bicameral Supreme Soviet that had been created by Stalin in 1937 but had exercised extraordinary little political authority, Gorbachev established a large Congress of People’s Deputies of 2,250 members elected for five-year terms. The Congress, in turn, was to elect the two chambers of the Supreme Soviet, the Soviet of the Union and the Soviet of Nationalities, each with 271 members. In contrast to the Supreme Soviet of 1937-1989, which met for only about one week of the entire year to approve policies already decided, the new legislative bodies were to hold both spring and autumn sessions of several months’ duration. The Supreme Soviet was subordinate and accountable to the Congress of deputies, but it elected the USSR Supreme Court and appointed the Procurator General, the highest legal officer of the government.
Gorbachev’s legislative creation proved to be cumbersome and soon it started to lose legitimacy.
As the principal Soviet executive and head of state, Gorbachev was unable to gain adequate control over the central government although he often presided over parliamentary sessions. He was also ineffective in attempting to abrogate laws and acts of republic authorities.
By late 1990 Gorbachev found himself the target of attacks from both the conservatives and the democratic reformers and finally was given up by them and replaced by Boris Yeltsin.
(Abridged from Michael Curtis. Introduction to Comparative Government, pp.350-351)
Vocabulary Unit 1
public (n)
1) публика; общественность to appeal to the ~ – обратиться к общественности to educate, enlighten the ~ – образовывать/просвещать общественность to fool, mislead the ~ – дурачить/обманывать народ, вводить людей в заблуждение in ~ – открыто, публично general ~ – широкая публика, общественность
public (adj)
1) государственный, общественный; ~ bradcasting – государственное радиовещание public policy – государственная политика to work in the ~ sector – работать в государственном секторе in the ~ interest – в общественных интересах ~ man – общественный деятель
2) народный, национальный, общенародный; ~holiday – национальный праздник
3) общедоступный, общественный, публичный; ~ sale – публичные торги, аукцион; ~ transport – общественный транспорт
4) гласный, открытый to make ~ – делать общеизвестным; ~ meeting – открытое заседание
administer (v)
вести дела; управлять, руководить to administer smb.'s affairs – вести чьи-л. дела to ~ the affairs of the state — управлять государством Syn: control
снабжать; помогать, содействовать (to) Syn: minister
отправлять, осуществлять, обеспечивать (правосудие, правопорядок и т.п.) to ~ justice — отправлять правосудие to ~ the law –проводить в жизнь законы to ~ the funeral rites — отправлять похоронные обряды
Syn: dispense
применять (меры воздействия и т.п. ) to ~ punishment — применять наказание to ~ an oath to smb. — приводить кого-л. к присяге
управлять наследственным имуществом
administrate (v)
(Am) управлять, контролировать Syn control, check
administration (n)
управление, ведение (дел), администрация Presidential Administration, local administration
администрирование, управление (страной, организацией) public ~ – государственное управление business ~ – деловое администрирование
administrative (adj)
управленческий, административный (Syn. managerial) ~ bill –административное постановление
administrator (n)
управляющий, руководитель
authorise (v)
уполномочивать
разрешать
authority (n)
(syn. to empower) to establish ~ – устанавливать власть; local ~ – местные органы власти
authoritative (adj)
(~ doctrine) – 1) официальный 2) влиятельный, авторитетный