Governance, Bureaucracy and Organization

Stewardship, Drift, and Administrative Capacity

Governance, Bureaucracy and Organization reframes bureaucracy as the living administrative architecture that determines whether organizations convert effort into outcomes, and argues that it must be actively governed rather than eliminated or simply endured. Drawing on organizational theory, complexity science, and detailed cases-including Kodak, the Stuttgart 21 rail project, and California's wildfire systems-the book introduces a practical diagnostic vocabulary: the Accelerator-Modulator-Restrictor spectrum, the Dual-Cone model of opportunity and maneuverability, the Stewardship Triad, and the five practices of Active Bureaucratic Management. It shows how capable organizations drift into failure while remaining busy, how to trace that drift forensically, and how artificial intelligence amplifies whatever governing conditions already exist. Rather than offering another reform program, it advances stewardship as a standing governance doctrine. The book is written for senior leaders, executives, and managers responsible for organizational performance; for scholars and students of management, organization studies, and public administration; and for consultants and analysts working on institutional change. Readers gain a rigorous, jargon-free framework for seeing, diagnosing, and governing bureaucracy-turning an unmanaged liability into a source of durable capability and credibility.

octobre 2026, env. 234 pages, Routledge Studies in Business Organizations and Networks, Anglais
Taylor and Francis
978-1-041-40329-6

Autres titres de la collection: Routledge Studies in Business Organizations and Networks

Afficher tout

Autres titres sur ce thème