Article

Revisiting Bureaucratic Dysfunction: The Role of Bureaucracy in Democratization*

Tobin Im 1
Author Information & Copyright
1“Tobin Im is a professor of the Graduate School of Public Administration and an adjunct researcher of the Korea Institute of Public Affairs at Seoul National University, Korea.” E-mail: tobin@snu.ac.kr.

© Copyright 2017 Graduate School of Public Administration, Seoul National University. This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Received: Dec 28, 2016; Revised: Jan 08, 2017; Revised: Feb 24, 2017; Accepted: Feb 27, 2017

Published Online: Apr 30, 2017

Abstract

While many studies have focused on the link between economics and democracy in exploring the strategies adopted by developing countries, they have tended to overlook the role of bureaucracy in democratization. This study seeks the missing link between bureaucracy and democratization. What are the conditions necessary for bureaucracy to facilitate the democratization process of a country? This article begins by briefly reviewing the bureaucracy literature from Max Weber and Karl Marx and then argues that despite its shortcomings, bureaucracy in its Weberian form can facilitate the political democratization of a developmental state. This study concludes that although bureaucracy is often regarded as dysfunctional, it can be instrumental in the democratization process in the context of the developmental state.

Keywords: Weberian bureaucracy; democracy; economic development; bureaucratic dysfunction