Source: The Administrative State, 1948, p. 206
“John M. Gaus, Leonard Dupee White, and Marshall E. Dimock. Frontiers of public administration.”
1936
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Leonard D. White 18
American historian 1891–1958Related quotes

“[M]y administration is committed to a leadership role on the issue of climate change.”
June 11, 2001. "President Bush Discusses Global Climate Change" http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2001/06/20010611-2.html.
2000s, 2001
"Anderson Could Win, Pollsters Agree", The Washington Post (18 June 1980)
1980s
Preview; lead paragraph
The Administrative State, 1948
John M. Gaus, 1958. "Leonard Dupee White—1891–1958." Public Administration Review 18(2): p. 233
"Rider Haggard: Still Riding", p. 25
The Tale Bearers: English and American Writers (1980)
“The study of public administration must include its ecology.”
Source: Reflections on public administration, 1947, p. 6
Context: The study of public administration must include its ecology. "Ecology," states the Webster Dictionary, "is the mutual relations, collectively, between organisms and their environment." J. W. Bews points out that "the word itself is derived from the Greek oikos a house or home, the same root word as occurs in economy and economics. Economics is a subject with which ecology has much in common, but ecology is much wider. It deals with all the inter-relationships of living organisms and their environment." Some social scientists have been returning to the use of the term, chiefly employed by the biologist and botanist, especially under the stimulus of studies of anthropologists, sociologists, and pioneers who defy easy classification, such as the late Sir Patrick Geddes in Britain.

Source: "Science, values and public administration," 1937, p. 189
“Any system of public administration inevitably reflects its environment.”
Leonard D. White (1932, 22), as cited in: Donald P. Moynihan. " Our Usable Past: A Historical Contextual Approach to Administrative Values https://www.lafollette.wisc.edu/images/publications/facstaff/moynihan/PAR69(5)UsablePast.pdf." Public Administration Review 69.5 (2009): 813-822.
Source: Introduction to the Study of Public Administration, 1926, p. 5