American Bureaucracy
Emma F, Taryn P, and Jason H.
Next Section: Introduction to Bureaucracy
The Cabinets of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Barack Obama(left to right)
Burea-what?
In a nation with such a large amount of rules and regulations, it may seem impossible for a single government to maintain and enforce its laws. How could just three branches keep an eye on the entire 3.7 million square miles of the United States? People could be selling non-FDA approved groceries in New York, trying to file claims to federal lands in Washington, and illegally drilling for natural gases on EPA protected territory in Texas--oh, and there goes Mr. Jenkins and his dog jaywalkin across the street in Tucson. In order to accomplish this large task, the government has developed a heirarchy and protocol to manage the needs of the country. This system is called the American bureaucracy.
Table of Contents
Page 1: Introduction to Bureaucracy
Page 2: The Cabinet
Page 3: Party In the Bureaucra--SA
Page 4: Agencies and Corporations
Page 5: The Fight For Control
Page 6: Regulation
Page 7: The Bureaucrats: A History
Page 8: The Bureaucrats: The Who's and How's
Page 9: Complexities, Constraints,and Problems
Page 10: Good, Bad, or Necessary
Page 11: Bureaucracy Rap Part 1
Page 12: Bureaucracy Rap Part 2
Page 13: Chapter Summary
Page 14: Get Connected!
Page 15: Works Cited
Page 16: Vocabulary List
Next Section: Introduction to Bureaucracy
Comments (3)
mberry said
at 6:55 pm on Sep 20, 2009
Watch typos (American needs to be capitalized)! But I LOVE the pictures, LOVE the tone...this is what we are going for (I think)! You MUST cite your sources (pictures are from where?)!
mberry said
at 12:01 pm on Nov 12, 2009
This is FANTASTIC! I would put the paragraph above the table of contents! But that's just me! :~)
Edouard Mattille said
at 6:12 pm on Nov 12, 2009
Unless I'm blind and/or retarded, shouldn't you put your names on this page?
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