THE GREAT MASTERS OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION:JUSTI, STEIN, BONNIN AND GONZÁLEZ

Authors

  • Omar Guerrero-Orozco Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22370/rgp.2015.4.1.2235

Keywords:

Public administration, Police, Cameralism, Intellectual history of public administration

Abstract

Pubic administration, like other disciplines, has great thinkers whose contributions are the foundation of its scientific development. They are the leaders and masters of the field of study. During the 18th century, Johann Heinrich von Justi studied the “police”, preceding the first studies in public administration that would be pioneered by Lorenz von Stein (Germany) and Charles-Jean Bonnin (France) one century later. Stein developed an administrative version of the rule of law in the 19th century. On the other hand, inspired by the French Revolution and Napoleon’s Empire, Bonnin created the modern concept of public administration. During the same period, Florentino González, a notable Colombian intellectual, wrote the first book on public administration in a Republic. This article studies the contributions of these great masters of public administration.

Published

2020-06-08

How to Cite

Guerrero-Orozco, O. (2020). THE GREAT MASTERS OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION:JUSTI, STEIN, BONNIN AND GONZÁLEZ. Revista De Gestión Pública, 4(1), 5–24. https://doi.org/10.22370/rgp.2015.4.1.2235

Issue

Section

Articles