Sir Henry Taylor's classic treatise "The Statesman," originally
published in 1836, is the first modern book to be devoted to the
subject of public administration. It has been read and studied by
generations for its keen insights into the relationship between
public administrators and elected officials in a democracy. It has
also been appreciated for its wit. The present volume is the first
twentieth-century edition to be based on the revised and expanded
text that Taylor published in 1878 as part of his Collected Works.
It is also the first edition to be fully annotated.
The lengthy editors' introduction to this volume emphasizes the
relevance of Taylor's thought to the fundamental issues of public
administration in the contemporary United States. The editors
demonstrate the superiority of Taylor's understanding of the
relationship between politics and administration to the widely
accepted model of that relation that derives from the thought of
Woodrow Wilson. Above all, they argue, Taylor's insights merit our
attention because they indicate how a properly organized civil
service can be a locus of statesmanship in a democracy, fulfilling
the intentions of the authors of the American Constitution in a
contemporary context that differs significantly from what the
Founders themselves anticipated.
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