000 01739naa a2200193uu 4500
001 0081911145541
003 OSt
005 20190218141800.0
008 100819s2002 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 fre d
100 1 _aIHL, Olivier
_941823
245 1 0 _aPour une sociologie historique des sciences de gouvernement
260 _aParis :
_bENA,
_cavr./jui. 2002
520 3 _aHow did state action become an object of scientific enquiry ? Any answer to such a question implies recognition of the fact that the management of both human beings and systems is carried out and legitimized thanks to specialized skills. Since the advent in Europe of absolute monarchies and the development of administrations with a monopoly over all government functions, power has been legitimized by science, rather than by secrecy. As a result, scientists, administrators, philanthropists, writers, magistrates and many others put their knowledge at the service of the “governmental sciences”. Under the pretext of introducing reforms, they impose new notions of rationality on state action and thus contribute to changing the way the administration functions. To explain the emergence of “State engineering” through the institutionalizing of these “disciplines”, we must use two intersecting viewpoints, the first focusing on the job of rationalizing the conditions of state intervention, and the second on the practices that justify and create the need for these specialized “skills”.
700 1 _aKALUSZYNSKI, Martine
_941824
773 0 8 _tRevue Française d'Administration Publique
_g102, p. 229-243
_dParis : ENA, avr./jui. 2002
_xISSN 01527401
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20100819
_b1114^b
_cJaqueline
998 _a20100830
_b1736^b
_cCarolina
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c35544
_d35544
041 _afre