01388pab a2200181 454500008004000000100002800040245012100068260000900189300001400198362000800212520077800220650002600998650002001024773003101044909001001075999001701085952010401102180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aRaadschelders, Jos C.N. aWoodrow wilson on the history of government: passing fad or constitutive framework for his philosophy of governance? c2002 ap.579-98. aNov aFrom the days of independence well into the 1920s, much of the American study of government was defined as the study of political, constitutional, and institutional history. The historical and comparative perspective of Woodrow Wilson on government is illustrative of late 19th-century public administration scholarship, which is characterized by a notions of the organic state and b) the awareness of an emerging administrative state and its centralizing tendencies. In this article the meaning of Wilson's The State for the development of administrative history and for his philosophy of governance is explored. Is he one of the founders of American administrative history? Is there more continuity or is there more change in his ideas about governance? - Reproduced. aPublic administration aWilson, Woodrow aAdministration and Society a54511 c54511d54511 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 34, Issue no: 5pAR54956r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR