Bentham and Bureaucracy
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:22nd Apr '04
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An examination of Bentham's programme for the executive and judicial branches of government.
Most accounts of Bentham treat him as a prophet of either utilitarianism or of liberal democracy. This book discusses a less familiar but very important aspect of his political thought: his theory of how government institutions should be organised in order to function as efficient and yet responsive guardians of the community's interests.Most accounts of Jeremy Bentham (1748–1832) deal with him as a prophet of either utilitarianism or of liberal democracy. This book discusses a less familiar but very important aspect of his political thought: his theory of how government institutions should be organised in order to function as efficient and yet responsive guardians of the community's interests. It thus focuses on his programme for he executive and judicial branches of government rather than for the legislature and the electorate. Dr Hume suggests that eighteenth-century political thought was richer in ideas about government that has usually been allowed, but that Bentham's special qualities of mind enabled him to widen and deepen those ideas much further than his contemporaries could have foreseen.
ISBN: 9780521526067
Dimensions: 217mm x 139mm x 19mm
Weight: 449g
336 pages