Ethics for Bureaucrats: An Essay on Law and ValuesM. Dekker, 1978 - 292 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 48
Page 80
... grounds and asserts that the principles of equal liberty and open positions necessarily dictate a normative commitment to internal organizational democracy and participative management " ( pp . 16-17 ) . Harmon's argument , though a ...
... grounds and asserts that the principles of equal liberty and open positions necessarily dictate a normative commitment to internal organizational democracy and participative management " ( pp . 16-17 ) . Harmon's argument , though a ...
Page 106
... grounds of the separate but equal doctrine . The most significant application of the Plessy princi- ple , however , arose in the area of public education . Long before Plessy , many schools in all parts of America had been segregated ...
... grounds of the separate but equal doctrine . The most significant application of the Plessy princi- ple , however , arose in the area of public education . Long before Plessy , many schools in all parts of America had been segregated ...
Page 125
... ground that the latter dealt " solely " with questions of administrative convenience . Although this is true , it ... grounds . First let us consider Brennan's dissent in which he was joined by Marshall : • • In my view a legislative ...
... ground that the latter dealt " solely " with questions of administrative convenience . Although this is true , it ... grounds . First let us consider Brennan's dissent in which he was joined by Marshall : • • In my view a legislative ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action administration agencies Amendment American appears applied argument authority basis become benefits bureaucrats citizens civil claim classification clause commerce common concerned Congress consideration Constitution contract course created decided decision denied direct discretion discrimination discussion dissent distinction due process effect enforce equal established ethics example executive exercise fact federal freedom give given grant grounds House important individual institutions interest interpretation involved issue Justice legislation liberty limited means ment military moral nature opinion persons political position practical present President principle privilege problem procedural protection question race racial reason regime regulation religion religious Representatives require rule schools segregation Senate situation social speech statement statute Supreme Court tion United University values welfare widows York