The Public Administration Theory Primer
H. George Frederickson and Kevin B. Smith (Boulder, CO: Westview Press,
2003)
Reviewed by Frank E. Scott
Political commentators have be gun to suggest that in a post- 9/11, post-Enron
environment, we may be witnessing the end of the "end" of the big government
era. Yet recent changes of direction with respect to the role of government
should surprise only those unfamiliar with the theoretical waves continuing
to buffet our field: rational choice, public management, governance, postmodernism,
among others. Thus, as Frederickson and Smith wisely point out, although
there may be "no more clever theorist than the scholar who claims to have
no theory," those who offer their ideas as mere descriptions of fact are
shielding them from further scrutiny only at the expense of failing the "truth-in-labeling
test" (p. 3).
As a broad-ranging look at our field's contemporary world of theory,
The Public Administration Theory Primer demonstrates how scholars also
can debunk successfully the notion that theorizing plays no significant
role in the day-to-day realm of public service. Drawing also upon empirical
evidence, the book challenges much of what has come to be the conventional
wisdom of governmental waste and inefficiency in comparison with the private
sector, laying out instead an evenhanded and optimistic picture of the
field today. As treatments of theory go, it is a very readable work, one
that comes complete with an appropriate amount of insightful commentary
and just a touch of Frederickson's dry wit, all in a remarkably concise
package.
Discussions of Recent Developments
The text offers solid overviews of more traditional but still relevant
topics such as politics versus administration, bureaucratic politics, and
public institutional theories. However, it makes perhaps its most significant
contribution in its well-crafted discussions of the more recent developments
in public management, rational choice, and governance theories, the latter
including Frederickson's own thoughtful assessment of how public administration
may be moving away from rational choice approaches and toward a greater
emphasis on "cooperation, networking, institution building and maintenance" (p.
222). The text makes perhaps its greatest stretch in covering interpretive,
critical, feminist, and especially postmodern approaches now arising in
the field. The characterization of postmodernism as "all about semantics" (p.
139) and as a "search for truth" (p. 140) bears out, at least from the
point of view of someone more sympathetic to this perspective, the text's
own assertion that it is difficult to make sense of postmodernism "using
modernist criteria or standard" (p. 145). Yet although perhaps lacking
the sophistication of the rest of the work, the appearance of an at least
adequate overview of these nontraditional ideas is something of a tribute
both to the theoretical versatility and to the even-handedness of the authors.
In short, this book is written competently and clearly, quite comprehensive
in view of its brevity, and about as even-handed on the issues as one could
reasonably expect from folks with a serious interest in theory (and thus,
undoubtedly, with strong theoretical preferences of their own). Although
well suited for MPA classroom use, I would say, it also should prove accessible
to the interested practitioner in a way that scholarly treatments on such
topics are often not. Do not look here for any significant challenge to
mainstream assumptions or beliefs, but, given that this work is intended
as a "primer," perhaps that is precisely in keeping with the authors' purpose.
Frank E. Scott is an assistant professor at California
State University, Hayward.