Discussion Board: The Ethics of Public Administration
According to Plant (2018), ethics in public administration is a continual balance between a moral approach to decision-making and external demands of politics and rule-determined behavior. Political influence includes the democratic will of the people, the influence of legislators and legislation, as well as a necessary negotiation between different factions, including other administrators and lobbying groups. Traditional views of ethical administration have stressed the need for the bureaucrats to use intelligence and expertise to make decisions during such negotiations, for example, in setting standards for drug approval or safety standards for flying on airplanes, while still following the letter of their defined responsibilities, or a balance between strict obedience-based responsibility and professional discretion and judgment (Plant, 2018, p.S38). This harkens to the Biblical dictate of the letter of the law kills, versus honoring the spirit behind the law, or the notion that spirit and letter are often not the same and can even seem in conflict. Even civics textbooks emphasize a balance the need for a legal compliance,
References
Bowman, J.S., Berman, E. M. & West, J.P. (2001). The profession of public administration:An ethics edge in introductory textbooks? Public Administration Review, 61 (2):194-205. https://www.jstor.org/stable/977453Hijal-Moghrabi, I. & Sabharwal, M. (2018) Ethics in American public administration:A response to a changing reality. Public Integrity, 20(5): 459-477DOI:10.1080/10999922.2017.1419053Plant, J F. (2018). Responsibility in public administration ethics. Public Integrity, 20: S33-S45.
DOI: 10.1080/10999922.2017.1413927
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