000 01321pab a2200157 454500
008 180718b2006 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aLee, Mordecai
245 _aPolitical-administrative relations in state government: a legislative perspective
260 _c2006
300 _ap.1021-047.
520 _aIn an effort to contribute to knowledge about political-administration relations in state government, this article presents the results of the author's participant-observation as a state legislator. Academics or public administration practitioners have written much of the literature on political-administrative relations. Little has been presented by politicians. The author reviews how the politicians who whom he served related to state administrators. He suggests that state legislators did not have a consistent approach in these relationships. Rather, administrators variously are enemies, allies, whipping boys or behind-the-scenes resources, depending on any given political situation in state government. Hence situational political logic dictated state political-administrative relations, driven by the self-interest of each particular elected official. - Reproduced.
650 _aPoliticians
650 _aCivil service
773 _aInternational Journal of Public Administration
909 _a72049
999 _c72049
_d72049