01222pab a2200145 454500008003600000100002000036245008400056520072000140650001100860650002600871773004500897909000900942999001500951952011000966180718b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aHummel, Ralph P aTowards a new administrative doctrine: governance and management for the 1990's aThree successive terms of market-oriented presidents raise difficulties for federal bureaucrats in legitimating past administrative doctrine and practices, where were government-centered. The present article responds to Charles Levine's call for a new administrative doctrine that is more fully descriptive of the needs and routines of today's federal civil servants than adoctrine based on either a liberal or neo-conservative ideology. The author introduces the concept of doctrine into public administration discourse in order to clarify the differences in ideology, and practices between an era of top-down Liberal progressiuism and the era of bottom-up neo-sonservative progressivism that dawned with the first a U.S.A aPublic Administration aAmerican Review of Public Administration a2094 c2094d2094 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hIssue no: 19(3), Sep.89, p.175-96pAR2094r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR