Description
The Administrative State in the 21st Century
Shortly after the 2016 election, presidential advisor Stephen Bannon vowed to pursue the "deconstruction of the administrative state," signaling the new administration's view that parts of government itself had stolen power from the American people. But while the administrative state may have been a new term for many Americans, debates around this so-called fourth branch of government have persisted since its origins in the late nineteenth century: What parts of life should agencies regulate? Is the administrative state constitutional? And is it time for significant change?
The Summer 2021 issue of Dædalus considers the future of the modern administrative state -- the more than two million civilian employees working in government agencies and institutions. Through exploration of such topics as automation and machine learning in government, democratic accountability, federal workforce morale, and the cost-benefit state, three options emerge from the issue: deconstruction via regulation and control by the legislature; tweaking, which would modify existing doctrine without significant changes; and reconstruction, which might involve adopting flexible modes of regulation like direct citizen deliberation in rulemaking.
Tag This Book
This Book Has Been Tagged
Our Recommendation
Notify Me When The Price...
Log In to track this book on eReaderIQ.
Track These Authors
Log In to track Aaron L. Neilson on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Bernard W. Bell on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Beth Simone Noveck on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Cary Coglianese on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Christopher J. Walker on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track David E. Lewis on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Mark Tushnet on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Peter L. Strauss on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Sean Farhang on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Susan E. Dudley on eReaderIQ.