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The Politics of Bureaucracy and the Failure of Post-War Reconstruction
July 20, 2007
Gordon Tullock's The Politics of Bureaucracy must be considered one of the most important works on bureaucracy ever written. In addition to discussing Tullock's contribution to our understanding of bureaucracy, in this working paper Coyne contends that his insights on the topic remain relevant today. To support this claim, Coyne focuses on U.S.-led reconstruction efforts which attempt to export liberal democracy via military occupation. Bureaucratic organizations play a key role in these reconstruction efforts and as such, Tullock's analysis is directly relevant. It is argued that Tullock's study clarifies not just the limits of bureaucratic activity, but also the importance of spontaneous orders for coordinating activities outside those limits and generating the very institutional context in which liberal democracy can evolve and sustain.
The ideas presented in this research are the author's and do not represent official positions of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.






