
Contents
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The Impetus for Historical Institutionalism in the Study of American Bureaucracy The Impetus for Historical Institutionalism in the Study of American Bureaucracy
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Historical Institutionalism and the Study of American Bureaucracy Historical Institutionalism and the Study of American Bureaucracy
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Methodological Approaches to the Study of American Bureaucracy Methodological Approaches to the Study of American Bureaucracy
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Historical Institutionalists' Analysis of the Administrative State Historical Institutionalists' Analysis of the Administrative State
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The Return of the State The Return of the State
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The Development of the State and Its Institutions The Development of the State and Its Institutions
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Building a New American State Building a New American State
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What Has Driven the Growth of the Administrative State? What Has Driven the Growth of the Administrative State?
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Public Policy, Historical Institutionalism, and the Administrative State Public Policy, Historical Institutionalism, and the Administrative State
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Controversies and Challenges: An Agenda for Future Research Controversies and Challenges: An Agenda for Future Research
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References References
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2 Historical Institutionalism, Political Development, and the Study of American Bureaucracy
Get accessDavid Brian Robertson is Curators’ Teaching Professor of Political Science at the University of Missouri–St. Louis. He is the author of several books on American political development, including The Original Compromise: What the Framers Were Really Thinking (2013), and he is associate editor of the Journal of Policy History.
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Published:02 January 2011
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Abstract
This article first describes the reasons that the historical-institutional approach has emerged and become prominent over the last thirty years in the study of American bureaucracy. It fully defines historical institutionalism and the characteristics that distinguish it from other approaches to the study of American bureaucracy. In addition, the contributions of this research are discussed in order to understand the American administrative state, as well as attendant claims of American exceptionalism. Summarized next are the contributions of historical institutionalism to various policy areas, including research on policy entrepreneurs, policy and administration, and the welfare state. The article finally evaluates the controversies and challenges that mark the field today, in the process offering advice about how to cope with them and an agenda for future research. The challenges presented should motivate both more historical-institutional research and more soul searching among historical-institutional scholars studying American bureaucracy.
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