Une révolution bureaucratique britannique ?
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Gales, Patrick LE (Author)
- Scott, Alan (Author)
Title
Une révolution bureaucratique britannique ?
Abstract
This article originated with a puzzle : how best to account for changes in the behavior of groups, organizations and individuals in Great Britain ? A detailed analysts of what Weber and Polanyi identified as interdependencies between state and market, and of the state's role in creating the market, led to the decision to adapt the notion of bureaucratic revolution put forward by Weber. We argue that the British bureaucratic revolution is reflected in the fact that the state plays an essential role in social change by creating rules and institutions that lastingly orient actors' behavior. The examples of health and local authorities are then used to identify mechanisms that were influential throughout a ten-year period specifically the introduction of competition features (rewards and punishments) and of auditing and inspection. If our interpretation is accurate, the effects of this bureaucratic revolution may well come to be felt in contexts other than Great Britain. (English)
Publication
Una revolución burocrática británica ? Autonomía sin control o « freer markets, more rules ».
Volume
49
Issue
2
Pages
301-330
Date
April 2008
Journal Abbr
Revue Française de Sociologie
Language
French
ISSN
00352969
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Gales, Patrick LE, and Alan Scott. 2008. “Une révolution bureaucratique britannique ?” Una revolución burocrática británica ? Autonomía sin control o « freer markets, more rules ». 49 (2): 301–30.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- 1997-2010
- bureaucratization
- economic policy
- Great Britain - social conditions - 1945-
- social goals
- socioeconomics
- WEBER, Max, 1864-1920
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