Filling a crucial gap in research on the presidency and
presidential communication, "Within These Walls" goes beyond the
study of presidential speeches and examines the organizational
structure, systems of information flow, and communication styles in
the administrations of Franklin Roosevelt through Ronald Reagan.
Focusing principally on the post-Watergate presidents, this book
illustrates that a primary dimension of presidential communication
is not that which is spoken during public addresses but that which
takes place between the chief executive and his senior staff.
Patricia Witherspoon's exhaustive research includes archival
material from the Ford and Carter presidential libraries as well as
information obtained from interviews with President Ford and
several former senior aides in the Ford, Carter, and Reagan White
Houses.
Applying organizational theory to her study of the modern
presidency, Witherspoon reveals that the White House, as we know it
today, began its evolution into a modern organization during the
FDR administration. It shares a variety of characteristics common
to other organizations, including formal and emergent structures,
formal and informal systems of information flow, and
decision-making processes and managerial and communication styles
selected and/or assumed by the organizational leader (the
president). Students and scholars of political communication,
political science, history, management and public policy, or any
informed reader concerned with the modern presidency will find
"Within These Walls" a source of valuable insight.
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