Along with the expansion and diversification of government in terms of tasks and personnel that began in the 19th century, a need for the application of new bureaucratic techniques and technologies emerged.
Antoon Kerkhoff / Peter Wagenaar / Mark Rutgers (red.): Duizend Jaar Openbaar Bestuur, Bussum 2011. See for instance: Zeger van der Wal: The 21st Century Public Manager, London 2017. The VUCA theme became popular in 1985 with Warren G. Bennis / Burton Nanus: Leaders. Strategies for Taking Charge, New York 1985. Frits van der Meer: Openbaar bestuur en het ambtelijk apparaat. De gevolgen van een voorwaardenscheppende staat voor de publieke dienst in een multilevel governance systeem, Den Haag 2021. Frits van der Meer / Gerrit Dijkstra / Toon Kerkhoff: What does the changing institutional design of the state do to the recruitment, merit requirements and deployment of (senior) civil servants? Recruitment and deployment in a changing decentralized civil service system in the Netherlands 1814–2016, in: Administory, Journal for Administrative History / Zeitschrift für Verwaltungsgeschichte (October 2016), pp.1–24.
To use a rather modern expression, change and innovation in public administration have always included ›software‹ – bureaucratic techniques – and ›hardware‹ dimensions. The hardware dimension refers to an increasing mechanization of work processes, not only in core administration and implementation agencies but also in state enterprises. The software innovations came about through transformation of internal work routines, management procedures, and public service delivery.
Change and innovation can be viewed through either an empirical or a normative conceptual lens.
For the normative and negative aspects of (social) innovation, see Ola Larsson / Taco Brandsen: The Implicit Normative Assumptions of Social Innovation Research. Embracing the Dark Side, in: Taco Brandsen et al. (eds.): Social Innovations in the Urban Context. Non-Profit and Civil Society Studies (An International Multidisciplinary Series), Cham 2016, pp. 8–24. John G. Gunnell: The Technocratic Image and the Theory of Technocracy, in: Technology and Culture, 23 / 3 (July 1982), pp. 392–416.
A conceptual history of innovation, technology, technocracy, and how innovation became a normative concept for examining change in administration is too extensive a topic for this contribution. We will therefore focus on the intensifying technologization of government affairs and the ensuing question: does this lead to a bureaucratically dominated technocratic government?
Below, we will examine past and present debates on positive and adverse effects of technocracy on governance. The latter pertain to effects on the scope for democratic governance and thus the position of political leaders, bureaucrats and citizens in decision-making. Will technologization lead to an impairment of the position of citizens and politicians within the system of governance? These questions are often thought to be of principal relevance only to present-day government and society. In fact, this has not historically been the case, as we will demonstrate below. We will concentrate on developments since the 1880s, illustrating our discussion with examples from the Dutch context. However, this discussion has wider temporal and cross-national ramifications. First, we need to examine the related concepts of ›bureaucracy, bureaucratic change, technology, and technocracy‹«. How does change in the public sector relate to technocracy? What does that imply for the formulation and application of good governance criteria? This raises a further point to consider: the connection of technocracy with political power; more explicitly, the interrelations of bureaucracy, technocracy, the administration of change and political power, especially the power of the citizenry and democracy – a long established field of historiography. This is not only relevant to the responsibility of political leaders and representatives to absorb and transmit technological changes in public administration and society, but also and especially to the position and authority of political officeholders. Is this position marginalized, since the word ›technocracy‹ seems also to involve a reduction of the position of politics, regarding the need and space for political choice? Are political choices being made redundant by – administrative – technology and bureaucratic technocrats? To answer these questions, we must begin with a conceptual analysis.
In the past, just as in the present, people have been consistently gripped by a fascination with impending future changes.
John Potts: Futurism, Futurology, Future Shock, Climate Change. Visions of the Future from 1909 to the Present, in: PORTAL Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies 15:1/2 (2018), pp. 99–116, online: Karl Löwith: Meaning in History. The Theological Implications of the Philosophy of History, Chicago 1949. Robert Nisbet: The History of Progress, London 1980. Max Weber: Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft. Grundriss der verstehenden Soziologie. Mit textkritischen Erläuterungen hrsg. von Johannes Winckelmann, 5., rev. Aufl. Tübingen 1976.
This fascination with the future and progress has gradually been put on a more systematic footing by the search for a scientific and rational basis for prediction. Since at least the 1850s, an array of publications has been issued containing explorations and predictions of what awaits the world and, in the slipstream, what is expected of government and bureaucracy to guide these changes. That new prominence also can be seen in the technocracy movement in the USA, which we will discuss in more detail below. The appreciation of technology is situated in the outcomes of the industrial revolution, industrial production, and the innovations accompanying and supporting this change process.
See for instance the showcasing of new technology during the Great Exhibition in London in 1851. Jeffery A. Auerbach: The Great Exhibition of 1851. A Nation on Display, New Haven 1999.
Concepts such as change, reform innovation, technology, and technocracy are interconnected; but are intrinsically vague, indeterminate, ambiguous, and in need of more precise definition. That imprecision may in fact be a key feature in the attraction of these concepts. However, for our analysis, it is rather problematic, as the myriad of concepts and the conceptual complexity, ambiguity, and changeability of their definitions over time obstruct a clear understanding. In addition, these concepts are highly charged and normative in nature, though this normative nature is often buried beneath a veneer of – political – neutrality. It has been argued that this transpires through a process of ›depoliticization‹.
For the origins of the concept, see Carl Schmitt: The Age of Neutralizations and Depoliticizations, in: Carl Schmitt, The Concept of the Political. Expanded Edition, trans.: George Schwab, Chicago 2007 [1929], pp. 80–96. See also Matthew Flinders / Jim Buller: Depoliticization: Principles, Tactics and Tools, in: British Politics, 1/3 (2006), pp. 293–318. Henry Mintzberg / James A. Waters: Of Strategies, Deliberate and Emergent, in: Strategic Management Journal 6/3 (1985), pp. 257–272. Christopher Pollitt / Geert Bouckaert: Public Management Reform. A Comparative Analysis - Into the Age of Austerity, Oxford, UK 2017. Walter Kickert / Frans-Bauke van der Meer: Small, Slow and Gradual Reform. What Can Historical Institutionalism Teach Us? in: International Journal of Public Administration, 34 (2011), pp. 475–485. Pollitt / Bouckaert: Public Management Reform. van der Meer: Openbaar bestuur en het ambtelijk apparaat. This is perhaps the most value-laden concept, suggesting an inevitable and unbreakable chain of events leading to the present. See also Reinhart Koselleck: Futures Past on the Semantics of Historical Time Translated and with an introduction by Keith Tribe, New York 2004.
How is the relationship between innovation and technology to be assessed? Innovation occurs in multiple arenas: societal, bureaucratic, technological, and so forth. The concept of innovation has particularly strong links to technological improvement and, above all, to engineering and inventions. That technological connection becomes apparent in the public response to the tangible inventions that coincide with a process of innovation. That connection is associated with the Industrial Revolution and the work and lives of its engineers, to cite the title of a work by 19th-century biographer and moral philosopher Samuel Smiles.
Samuel Smiles: Lives of the Engineers. With an Account of their Principal Works, London 1861–1867. Maarten Franssen / Gert-Jan Lokhorst / Ibo van de Poel: Philosophy of Technology, in: The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (fall 2018). For an overview of the philosophical perspective, see Johan Hendrik / Jacob van der Pot / Chris Turner: Steward or Sorcerer’s Apprentice? The evaluation of technical progress. A systematic overview of theories and opinions, Delft 22004 [1994] under the title: Encyclopedia of Technological Progress. A systematic overview of theories and opinions. Similar to the economic man in decision-making as formulated and criticized by Herbert A. Simon: Administrative Behavior. A Study of Decision-Making Processes in Administrative Organization, New York 41997 [1947], p. 947.
Technocracy is currently viewed in public administration – PA – and political science literature as a rather negative phenomenon, but this has not always been the case. Technocracy can be defined as government by technocrats. The coining of the concept of ›technocracy‹ is attributed to the engineer William Henry Smyth in 1919: »The rule of the people made effective through the agency of their servants, the scientists and engineers«.
Finally, innovation and change through the application of a new technology can/will have disruptive consequences. In the ambition to make widespread use of technological innovation and change, an opening for the occurrence of disruptive effects emerges. The concept ›disruptive technologies‹ was introduced by Clayton M. Christensen and Joseph Bower in 1995 in their article »Disruptive Technologies: Catching the Wave«.
Clayton M. Christensen / Joseph Bower: Disruptive Technologies. Catching the Wave, in: Harvard Business Review January-February (1995). See the current promotion of ideas on how to deal with and use the opportunities exposed by disruption to improve public service delivery through technological (e-based) innovation, by consultancy firms as PwC and Deloitte.
Modern government is premised on normalizing change, innovation, reform, technology, and the application of technological solutions. By normalizing, we mean two things: that change, innovation, reform, technology, and the application of technological solutions come to be seen as normal, routine, and expected; and that they are seen to be good and positive, as things or states to be embraced and indeed encouraged, culminating in the recent celebration of contrived ›disruption‹ and its positive effects. These twin assumptions are typically presented as neutral, but they are, in fact, political. Change depends on choice and, in government, choice is always political, because it depends on choices between different values. The drive to change, modernize, innovate, and reform society and government stems from the perceived necessity of dealing with economic, societal, organizational, and other environmental pressures.
Jos C.N. Raadschelders / Frits van der Meer / Theo A. J. Toonen: Comparative Civil Service Systems. Comparative Perspectives, Houndsmill 2007, 2015. Frits van der Meer: Crises and Administrative Innovation in The Netherlands, in: Yearbook of European Administrative History, Baden-Baden 1995. See the work of Woodrow Wilson from his early career as a political science professor, his successors in the USA, and Gerrit van Poelje, the founding father of Dutch Public Administration as a professional academic discipline. Van Poelje started as a civil servant and became permanent secretary of the Ministry of Education. He ended his career as a member of the Dutch Council of State. In the cases of Wilson and van Poelje, we see a combination of active practice with an academic approach to the improvement of administration. Gerald E. Caiden: Administrative Reform Comes of Age, Berlin 1991. Frits van der Meer: Publieke Sector Hervormingen, Den Haag 2021.
Innovation and the application of new technologies in private and public organizations entail the prospect of making the best use of the opportunities provided by technological change. This is made apparent in the work of Frederick Taylor (1856–1915). A mechanical engineer by training, Taylor was a founder of the scientific management movement.
Frederick Winslow Taylor: The Principles of Scientific Management, New York 1911. van der Meer: Publieke Sector Hervormingen. For an overview of these criticisms over time, see: Robert B. Denhardt / Thomas J. Catlaw: Theories of Organization, Belmont, CA 2014. Jean Christie: Morris Llewellyn Cooke. Progressive Engineer, New York, 1983. H.W. Lintsen (ed.) / A. Bosch / W. van der Ham: Twee eeuwen Rijkswaterstaat, 1798–1998, Zaltbommel 1998.
Towards the end of the 19th century, these Delft-trained engineers were increasingly involved in engineering projects for – predominantly local – government, Rijkswaterstaat and the private sector, due to the industrialization process mentioned above. In addition to engineering, they became involved in managing these projects. A number of these engineers became attracted to so-called economic rationalization efforts
Delft engineers such as Ernst Hijmans and Berend Berenschot were founding members of influential economic advisory and consultancy firms. Harry Lintsen: Ingenieur van beroep. Historie, praktijk, macht en opvattingen van ingenieurs in Nederland, Den Haag 1985. Baltus Pekelharing, the chair in economics, was influential in this area. He was personally criticized in 1903 by the Prime Minister Abraham Kuyper for forming a generation of social democrats.
Technology can nevertheless be perceived as a double-edged sword. The idea that knowledge and control cannot be attained without paying a heavy price is ancient.
There are similarities to the account of Adam and Eve in Genesis, but these can also be found in other creation narratives. A penalty must be paid by Adam and Eve after eating the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. After losing their innocence through the acquisition of knowledge and perception, they are exiled from the Garden of Eden. Ayn Rand: The Fountainhead, New York 1952 [1943]. Ayn Rand: Atlas Shrugged, New York 1996 [1956]. Robert Nozick: Anarchy, State and Utopia, Oxford 1974.
The growth of government in terms of tasks, powers, number of civil servants, and the diversification of the knowledge and skills needed in the civil service was a direct response to an accelerating process of industrialization and increasing demands for social emancipation.
Frits van der Meer: Voorwaarden, waarborgen en ambtenaren, Leiden 2012. van der Meer: Openbaar bestuur en het ambtelijk apparaat. Jos C.N. Raadschelders: Handbook of Administrative History, London 1998. Jos C.N Raadschelders / Mark R. Rutgers: The Evolution of Civil Service Systems, in: Hans A. Bekke / James L. Perry / Theo A.J. Toonen (eds.): Civil Service Systems in Comparative Perspective, Bloomington, IN 1996. Frits van der Meer / Laurens J. Roborgh: Ambtenaren in Nederland. Omvang, bureaucratisering en representativiteit van het ambtelijk apparaat, Alphen a/d Rijn 1993; Gerrit Dijkstra / Frits van der Meer: The civil service system of the Netherlands, in: Frits M. van der Meer (ed.): Civil Service Systems in Western Europe, Cheltenham/Aldershot 2011. Gerrit Dijkstra / Frits van der Meer: The Civil Service System of the Netherlands.
It is thus hard to deny that technology and digitalization have had a deep and lasting impact on government and bureaucracy. The digital change process that began in the late 1980s and 1990s had an external dimension, transforming the relationship between government and society by changing the character of their interaction. It shifted what had primarily been a human form of interaction towards more distanced, digital contact.
van der Meer: Openbaar bestuur en het ambtelijk apparaat. Robert K. Merton: Bureaucratic Structure and Personality, in: Social Forces, 18 / 4 (1940), pp. 560–568.
The impact of technological innovations such as digitalization and IT on the structure and operations of government organizations can, however, be exaggerated. The prediction of the demise of bureaucracy and the emergence of an ›infocracy‹, as proposed by Zuurmond,
Arre Zuurmond: De infocratie. Een theoretische en empirische heroriëntatie op Weber’s idealtype in het informatietijdperk, Den Haag 1994.
Though much is expected of government by digital enthusiasts and IT consultants, the idea of ›digitizing government‹ provides few clues to the solution of these access disparities. Making things even more complicated, digitalization, in addition to the digital literacy issue, reinforces, through the development of standardized procedures and protocols and through the use of algorithms, a dehumanized e-relationship between government and citizens. Assessment of the wishes, needs, and possibilities of citizens is based on the needs, abilities, and skills of the political and bureaucratic designers of these e-governance systems.
van der Meer: Openbaar bestuur en het ambtelijk apparaat. Aris van Braam: Ambtenaren en Bureaukratie, Zeist 1957.
At the start of our discussion, we said that attention would – also – be directed to the implications of technological change for the relationship between politics, civil servants, and society. Central to our discussion has been the concept of technocracy, as, on the positive side, a source of innovation and an instrument of change for the better. Public officials are perceived as the experts Guy B. Peters: The Politics of Bureaucracy. An Introduction to Comparative Public Administration, New York 2018. Joel Aberbach / Robert Putnam / Bert Rockham: Bureaucrats and Politicians in Western Democracies, Cambridge, MA 1981. Guy B. Peters: Comparing Public Bureaucracies. Problems of Theory and Method. Tuscaloosa, FL 1998. Max Weber: Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft. Grundriss der verstehenden Soziologie. Mit textkritischen Erläuterungen hrsg. von Johannes Winckelmann, 5., rev. Aufl., Tübingen 1976. Gerrit Dijkstra / Frits van der Meer: The civil service system of the Netherlands, in: van der Meer (ed.): Civil Service Systems in Western Europe,
In a technocracy, technical experts supplant the role and power of political and social leaders. Politics, however, involves determining value judgments and making binding choices about them. These choices are inherently arbitrary, while the civil service role is one of a rational combination of purposes and means. Politics is ›messy‹ and the activities of the ›rational‹ public official are, according the technocratic view, essentially objective and value-neutral. This normative vision explains the appeal of technocracy and planning. This can be seen in recent Dutch administrative history. It may be observed, for instance, in the Netherlands, in many State Commissions on the running of government and, in the UK, in the British Fulton Report of 1968. Technocratic dimensions of government are emphasized in the pursuit of further rationalization of governance through planning, application of advanced instruments, and identification of desirable characteristics in officials to be recruited.
The question of whether all decisions and decision-making procedures can be reduced to technical and purely rationally based decisions remains. The popularity of ›new public management‹
New Public Management has been mockingly rephrased as New Scientific Management. Christopher Hood: Public management for all seasons, in Public Administration, 69 (1991), pp. 3–19. Janet V. Denhardt / Robert B. Denhardt: The New Public Service. Serving, Not Steering, Armonk, NJ 2002. Parliamentary Commission Bosman: Tijdelijke commissie Uitvoeringsorganisaties (TCU) (2021) Eindrapport; Parlementaire ondervragingscommissie Kinderopvangtoeslag (POK Commission Bosman) Windrapport 2020.
Bureaucratic innovation through the introduction of new technologies, such as the digitalization of internal work processes and public service delivery, has had undeniable benefits in terms of efficiency, predictability, and convenience. This is, however, not the whole picture, as there are also undeniable drawbacks attached to the change. Through digitalization, work processes have become increasingly driven by protocol and standardization. One could even say they have become more bureaucratized, perhaps not in purely Weberian terms, but from a scientific-management perspective. Two potential negative side effects of digitalization as a bureaucratic innovation – strategy – merit special mention. First, citizens must have ample bureaucratic and digital competencies in order to access public services. In addition, one can, especially if one is not a standard case, be lost in the system. The Dutch Council of State and the National Ombudsman have pointed out these issues regularly over the last decade, and they are also clearly apparent in the recurring political-administrative crises discussed above.
Perhaps the normative consequences of bureaucratic innovation have been the most crucial ones. These pertain to the relationship between officeholders, the legislature, and society on the one side and unelected technocratic bureaucratic officials on the other. By rationalizing government decision-making and performance through a predominant emphasis on a technological and hard-science take on governance, the idea of an apolitical and value-neutral government has been enforced. That technocratic and hard-science take on government and bureaucracy is, as we have argued, highly political in nature, entailing paradoxical denial of the fuzzy and partly subjective nature of policy issues and diversity in political, bureaucratic, and societal thinking. The idea of technological change is connected in both cultural myth and scientific work to the titan Prometheus of Greek mythology. The word ›Prometheus‹ is sometimes used as a symbol for organizations and associations in the technical realm. By stealing fire from the gods, humanity can control nature and escape the power of the gods – nature. Humankind can determine its own destiny.
Koselleck: Futures Past. Nisbet: The History of Progress, pp. 18–21.
However, on the flipside of the coin, there are potential drawbacks for society, government, and bureaucracy: the gifts of Pandora’s Box, the ancient, deep-rooted belief that knowledge and control are not to be had without paying a price. Modern-day dystopian perspectives provide ample examples of this line of thought; this implicit bargain must be taken into account by public officials, academics, and the public.
Central to our discussion has been the temporality of technology and technocracy and a political vision of the necessity and desirability of bureaucratic and government change and innovation. At the same time, technology, technocracy, and scientific expertise root their authority in their – apparently – nonpolitical status. Paradoxically, this can also be a part of their political attractiveness, allowing the shedding of political responsibility by government and bureaucracy. This use is also highly political. Ultimately, technology is not a neutral instrument for public sector organizations. In conclusion, we argue that the promotion of change, technology, and the rise of technocracy in the Netherlands has only led, in fact, to an intensification of bureaucracy and thus the disempowerment of society, not its liberation. The point seems to be that it is impossible to reduce policy-making and policy-implementation to technical-bureaucratic considerations alone without invoking the peril of grave public dissatisfaction.
Inhalt The Logic of Simplifying Public Administration in Hungary, 1900–1910 »A stupid dread of innovation«: Wandel, Zeitlichkeit und das Problem der Innovation in frühneuzeitlichen Verwaltungen M-Government: Recht und Organisation mobilen Verwaltens Antonio Serra, Early Modern Political Economist: From Good Government as Individual Behavior to Good Government as Practical Policy An Unbound Prometheus? Bureaucracy, Technology, Technocracy, and Administrative Innovation The Motives for and Consequences of the Introduction of Typewriters and Word Processing in the British Civil Service Die Gestaltung von Wandel und Innovation im Mehrebenensystem der Militärverwaltung Österreich-Ungarns um 1900 Innovation durch Technik? Rohrpostsysteme als Medientechnologien der Verwaltung im 20. Jahrhundert »Typewriting Medicine« – Bürotechnologische Innovationen und klinische Verwaltung am Beispiel der Charité Berlin, 1890–1932 Assessment as innovation: The case of the French administration in the nineteenth century Bürokratie, Wandel und Innovation – verwaltungshistorische Perspektiven McKinsey auf der Hardthöhe: Unternehmensberater im Bundesministerium der Verteidigung 1981/82 Ein neues Gedächtnis für die Verwaltung: born digitals und die Wissenschaft. Ein TagungsberichtEinführung und/oder Abschaffung von Arbeitsbüchern als Innovation. 1 The Only Game in Town? New Steering Models as Spaces of Contestation in 1990s Public Administration