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Administration & Society, Vol. 38, No. 5,
522-555 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/009539970603800503
The Presidents Committee on Administrative Management
The Untold Story and the Federalist Connection
Stephanie P. Newbold
The University of Texas at Dallas
Larry D. Terry
The University of Texas at Dallas
The final report of the Presidents Committee on Administrative Management has been widely cited as a landmark study designed to improve executive branch management. This observation, however, does not tell the complete story of its constitutional complexity. In addition to the report that President Roosevelt submitted to Congress in 1937, he commissioned five additional studies that, individually and collectively, reveal the untold story of the Brownlow Project. They emphasize not only the improvement of public management but also the improvement of democracy within the American administrative state. Alexander Hamiltons argument regarding unity of the executiveand his understanding of the imperative nature of this philosophical principle on the American constitutional republicconnects these documents. Together, the papers underscore that the legitimacy of American public administration can be found only within its constitutional heritage.
Key Words: Presidents Committee on Administrative Management (1937) executive branch management unity of the executive
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