Administrative Management Approach
Administrative Management Approach
SUBJECT
FACULTY DATE
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ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGEMENT:
Basically focuses on how a business should be organized and the practices an effective manager should follow. Administrative management is about managing information through people. Information is central to all management processes and people are the resources who make best use of that information to add value. Evidence of good administration is when you dont know it is happening! The Lord Peston of Mile End.
1. Division of Labour 2. Authority 3. Discipline 4. Unity of Command 5. Unity of Direction 6. Subordination of Individual Interest to the Common Good 7. Remuneration 8. Centralization 9. The Hierarchy 10. Order 11. Equity 12. Stability of Staff 13. Initiative 14. Esprit de Corp According to Fayol the five functions of managers were:
Fayol emphasized the role of administrative management and concluded that all activities that occur in business organizations could be divided into six main groups. 1. Technical (production, manufacturing); 2. Commercial (buying, selling, exchange);
3. Financial (obtaining and using capital); 4. Security (protection of property and persons); 5. Accounting (balance sheet, stocktaking, statistics, costing); 6. Managerial (planning, organizing, commanding, coordinating, controlling). II MAX WEBER (1864-1920), a German Sociologist, described an ideal type of organization
that he called Bureaucracy, characterized by division of labour, a clearly defined hierarchy, detailed rules and regulations, and impersonal relationships. His theory became the design prototype for many of todays large organizations. III CHESTER I.BARNARD (1886-1961) saw organizations as social systems that require human cooperation. A major part of an organizations success depended on the cooperation of its employees. He went further to emphasize the organization as the cooperative enterprise of individuals working together in groups. One of Barnards significant contributions was the informal organization. The informal organization occurs in all formal organizations and includes cliques and naturally occurring social groupings. Another significant contribution of Barnard was the acceptance theory of authority, which states that people have free will and can choose whether to follow management orders. By recognizing the organizations dependence on investors, suppliers, customers, and other stakeholders, Barnard introduced the idea that managers had to examine the external environment and then adjust the organization to maintain a state of equilibrium. IV V COLNEL LYNDAL URWICK LUTHER GULICKS
I . independent administrative approach II . subsidiary administrative approach Independent Administrative Approach: The (central or local) administration is the main actor in organised crime prevention: decision of the administration based on (criminal) intelligence. Need for special (data protection) rules to allow for information transmission between judicial and administrative authorities. Subsidiary Administrative Approach: The (central or local) administration uses decisions of judicial authorities for organised Crime prevention.
Nevertheless, many tasks in the contemporary world call for organizations wherein creative thinking and innovation are essential ingredients of survival as well as growth. Institutions for innovation require organization built around men. No organization chart should stand in the way of recognizing and rewarding talent. Moreover, the early beginnings of any institution are crucial and the culture (or lack of it) brought by the entrants plays a significant role in establishing the norms, Procedure and practices of the organization. The numbers of such entrants should, in addition, be large enough to achieve the critical size necessary to permit positive interactions. The introduction of persons from a different working culture will, however, seriously impede the operation of such organization. The appointments, for example, of competent government officials whose experience is primarily derived from routine administration in key positions or in large numbers at lower positions in research organizations or in industrial enterprises would thus be highly questionable. For it has been found in the last 20 years that thought many of these organization are established As autonomous in the legal sense, administrative practices are introduced which negate the granted. In professional groups, such as those of scientists, engineers it is important to recognize that motivation and control are largely inherent and contained in professional commitments. Money, hierarchical status and power are important for most cadres, but to scientists and professional groups, the need for autonomy of working conditions and opportunities for self-development are equally important. The exercise of control, for example, through the discussion and the judgment of peers is a unique feature of scientific organization positive benefit to themselves, but they do have a choice. He proposed that an enterprise can operate efficiently and survive only when the organizations goals are kept in balance with the aims and needs of the individuals working for it.
2. technical considerations, and 3. Apparatus limitations. For example, under public needs and benefits, it considers such factors as the dependence of the service on radio rather than wires and the relative social and economic importance of the service. Under technical considerations, the FCC considers the service's need for a particular portion of the spectrum because of propagation characteristics or compatibility with existing services. Under apparatus limitations, it considers the upper, practical limit of the useful radio spectrum range and actual operating characteristics of transmitters, receivers, and antennas. In addition to allocating and allotting the spectrum in the public interest by reviewing the factors described above, the FCC must assign channels (or groups of channels) to individual licensees. As noted earlier, some channels in a geographic area may be assigned only to one party, that is, they are exclusive. If more than one person or entity applies for an exclusive channel, the applications are said to be mutually exclusive. Traditionally, the FCC chose (and in some services still chooses) from among mutually exclusive applications through a "comparative hearing". Comparative hearings are adjudicatory in nature. The FCC selects the winning applicant in a quasi-judicial hearing process using comparative criteria established by precedent or formal rulemaking. B. Perceived Problems with the Traditional Administrative Approach As described above, spectrum management can be divided into two distinct phases: the allocationallotment phase and the assignment-licensing phase. Succinctly stated, in the United States, both the allocation-allotment and assignment-licensing phases involve centralized administrative processes. In the case of the former, the process involves formal rulemaking proceedings, and in the case of the latter, formal adjudicatory proceedings. It is beyond the intended scope of this paper to delve into all the real or perceived problems with the traditional administrative approach to spectrum allocation and allotment. However, as indicated in section I, the most fundamental problem with the traditional approach is that it represents a centrally administered method of allocating a scarce resource. As many Communist-block countries with centrally managed economies found to their chagrin, it is extremely difficult to allocate resources without the benefit of marketplace pressures and signals. Consequently, it should come as no surprise that the centralized allocation of increasingly valuable radio spectrum suffers from the same defects, including excessive rigidity, delay, waste, and high regulatory costs for the government and the private sector. Perhaps the most publicized failure of the administrative process in allocating spectrum was the prolonged delay occasioned by the FCC's efforts to reallocate and license spectrum for the cellular mobile radio service. Many observers believe that the delay, almost 20 years by some accounts, seriously harmed the public by denying
them a service that history, if nothing else, has demonstrated that they value highly, and by significantly diminishing American industry's initial lead in cellular radio technology in the international marketplace.