3. The Politics-Administration Dichotomy
A Reconstruction
PROEFSCHRIFT
ter verkrijging van
de graad van Doctor aan de Universiteit Leiden,
op gezag van de Rector Magnificus prof. mr. P.F. van der Heijden,
volgens besluit van het College voor Promoties
te verdedigen op woensdag 13 januari 2010
klokke 15.00 uur
door
Patrick Overeem
geboren te Ede in 1978
6. ISBN/EAN: 978-90-5335-242-7
Printing, cover design and lay-out by:
Ridderprint, Ridderkerk - www.thesisprinting.nl
The research for this dissertation was made possible by a financial grant from the
Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO).
7. Contents
PREFACE ix
1. A QUANDARY 1
1.1 The standard account 1
1.2 Waldo’s challenge 4
1.3 Aims and central question 7
1.4 Scope of the inquiry 13
1.5 Approach and plan of the study 15
2. CONCEPTUAL ORIGINS 21
2.1 ‘Beyond Woodrow Wilson’ 21
2.2 Traditional political thought 24
2.3 The separation-of-powers doctrine 27
2.4 Montesquieu or Hegel 32
2.5 The French approach 36
2.6 The German approach 44
2.7 At crossroads 51
3. CLASSICAL FORMULATIONS 55
3.1 Revising revisionism 55
3.2 Wilson: ‘Administrative questions are not political questions’ 57
3.3 Goodnow: Two primary functions of government 66
3.4 Weber: Different orders of life 70
3.5 Separation and subordination 79
3.6 Classics contra constitutionalism 82
4. HETERODOX CRITICISMS 87
4.1 A tenet of orthodoxy? 87
4.2 From ‘politics’ to ‘policy’ 91
4.3 ‘A seriously erroneous description of reality’ 96
8. 4.4 ‘A deficient, even pernicious, prescription for action’ 102
4.5 A note on discretion 104
4.6 Heterodoxy as a radical rupture 107
5. VIABLE SUBSTITUTES? 113
5.1 The quest for ‘the formula’ 113
5.2 Quasi-alternatives 116
5.3 Typologies 122
5.4 Complementarity 128
5.5 Unifying concepts 135
5.6 Towards a renewed understanding 138
Appendix: Typologies of political-administrative relations 143
6. A CONSTITUTIONAL PRINCIPLE 147
6.1 Mistaken identity 147
6.2 The Constitutional School 149
6.3 The dichotomy as constitutional principle 155
6.4 Counterfactual reasoning 159
6.5 Constitutional functioning in practice 162
6.6 The dichotomy and the separation-of-powers doctrine 167
6.7 Coming full circle 174
7. THE MEANINGFUL DICHOTOMY 179
7.1 The ‘perdurability’ of the dichotomy 179
7.2 Content: A layered construct 183
7.3 Purpose: Political, administrative, and constitutional 190
7.4 Relevance: Escaping from the quandary 195
7.5 ‘A commonsense usefulness’ 200
EPILOGUE: THE STUDY OF ADMINISTRATION AND POLITICS 203
LITERATURE 211
SAMENVATTING 231
CURRICULUM VITAE 241