Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Introducing Public Administration [with MySearchLab Code]

Rate this book
* NEW! Annotated bibliographies and related web sites at the end of each chapter. * NEW! Sections on organization development (in the Organization Behavior chapter) and lying about sex (in the Ethics chapter). * EXPANDED! Coverage of government regulation (Ch. 1). * EXPANDED! Discussion of the nonprofit sector (Ch. 3). * A readable and humorous text that receives high ratings from students. * Each chapter begins with a vignette or Keynote presented in a storytelling format. These Keynotes are mini case studies that are often referred to in the chapter, thus reinforcing the overall themes or lessons of the stories. * Chapters typically deal with historical and theoretical developments and then explain how relevant concepts and practices are applied in the varying levels of government and in varying cultures. * Hundreds of boxed quotes from public administrators, charts, graphs, and photos give the text a student friendly and engaging design.

592 pages, ebook

First published December 1, 1996

55 people are currently reading
768 people want to read

About the author

Jay M. Shafritz

71 books14 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
44 (24%)
4 stars
42 (23%)
3 stars
49 (27%)
2 stars
26 (14%)
1 star
18 (10%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Daniel.
146 reviews
December 3, 2017
Very informative. Great basics for Public Administration. Organized well. Learned many different cultural reasons why some things are the way they are today.

My issue with the book is no matter the time of day I fell asleep after a few pages. There was so much in each chapter to remember. The chapter sometime ran up to 40+ pages. Not like fiction reading where you can get sucked in and not realize how long the chapter was. This was slogging through rice paddies at times.

What turned it around for me was adding background noise. Football or music. Reading went much faster and I stayed awake.

Three stars because it did its job in a manner that didn't engage me until the end.
Profile Image for Alǝx Anton.
1 review1 follower
September 18, 2015
This is horrible scholarship by someone who, by writing an introductory textbook for an entire discipline, should be an expert.

Incredible amount of bias, silly (and inaccurate) metaphors, arduous, and overall a terrible read. Ironically, in one of my other MPA classes, we are discussing how public administration has not always been taken seriously as a distinct field. This book serves up a good argument for that!
Profile Image for Amber.
2,292 reviews
March 23, 2014
Very good introductory book for public administration students. Took me awhile to get into it, but once you become accustomed to their style of writing it's very good.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
1,049 reviews4 followers
November 29, 2023
This was dated (2009) so they had no clue what was going to happen to our government post-2016, but as a textbook it was pretty good. I actually had some LOL moments, but that could just be me being weird. They really like Woodrow Wilson a lot and don't really mention his efforts to deny women the vote. I thought that was strange for a book published in 2009.
Profile Image for Amber.
2,292 reviews
October 20, 2019
Will continue to use for intro course even though there are some organizational issues as far as content.
Profile Image for Julie.
144 reviews2 followers
April 14, 2021
Boring to read. My professor described this as the best of what’s out there. Because of his description, I gave it the second star. We barely used it.
Profile Image for Amy.
369 reviews3 followers
November 18, 2011
Hated this book. Incredibly biased, ignorant and poorly written - I wanted to take an ice pick to my eyeballs for being forced to read it, and thankful that I was able to get away with not reading much of it.
Profile Image for Booker.
2 reviews1 follower
March 25, 2011
Who doesn't want to read a book about organizational theory (unless forced)?
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.