Literature DB >> 20071103

The cancer of bureaucracy: how it will destroy science, medicine, education; and eventually everything else.

Bruce G Charlton.   

Abstract

Everyone living in modernizing 'Western' societies will have noticed the long-term, progressive growth and spread of bureaucracy infiltrating all forms of social organization: nobody loves it, many loathe it, yet it keeps expanding. Such unrelenting growth implies that bureaucracy is parasitic and its growth uncontrollable - in other words it is a cancer that eludes the host immune system. Old-fashioned functional, 'rational' bureaucracy that incorporated individual decision-making is now all-but extinct, rendered obsolete by computerization. But modern bureaucracy evolved from it, the key 'parasitic' mutation being the introduction of committees for major decision-making or decision-ratification. Committees are a fundamentally irrational, incoherent, unpredictable decision-making procedure; which has the twin advantages that it cannot be formalized and replaced by computerization, and that it generates random variation or 'noise' which provides the basis for natural selection processes. Modern bureaucracies have simultaneously grown and spread in a positive feedback cycle; such that interlinking bureaucracies now constitute the major environmental feature of human society which affects organizational survival and reproduction. Individual bureaucracies must become useless parasites which ignore the 'real-world' in order to adapt to rapidly-changing 'bureaucratic reality'. Within science, the major manifestation of bureaucracy is peer review, which - cancer-like - has expanded to obliterate individual authority and autonomy. There has been local elaboration of peer review and metastatic spread of peer review to include all major functions such as admissions, appointments, promotions, grant review, project management, research evaluation, journal and book refereeing and the award of prizes. Peer review eludes the immune system of science since it has now been accepted by other bureaucracies as intrinsically valid, such that any residual individual decision-making (no matter how effective in real-world terms) is regarded as intrinsically unreliable (self-interested and corrupt). Thus the endemic failures of peer review merely trigger demands for ever-more elaborate and widespread peer review. Just as peer review is killing science with its inefficiency and ineffectiveness, so parasitic bureaucracy is an un-containable phenomenon; dangerous to the extent that it cannot be allowed to exist unmolested, but must be utterly extirpated. Or else modernizing societies will themselves be destroyed by sclerosis, resource misallocation, incorrigibly-wrong decisions and the distortions of 'bureaucratic reality'. However, unfortunately, social collapse is the more probable outcome, since parasites can evolve more rapidly than host immune systems.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20071103     DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2009.11.038

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Hypotheses        ISSN: 0306-9877            Impact factor:   1.538


  2 in total

1.  Peer review versus editorial review and their role in innovative science.

Authors:  Georg Steinhauser; Wolfram Adlassnig; Jesaka Ahau Risch; Serena Anderlini; Petros Arguriou; Aaron Zolen Armendariz; William Bains; Clark Baker; Martin Barnes; Jonathan Barnett; Michael Baumgartner; Thomas Baumgartner; Charles A Bendall; Yvonne S Bender; Max Bichler; Teresa Biermann; Ronaldo Bini; Eduardo Blanco; John Bleau; Anthony Brink; Darin Brown; Christopher Burghuber; Roy Calne; Brian Carter; Cesar Castaño; Peter Celec; Maria Eugenia Celis; Nicky Clarke; David Cockrell; David Collins; Brian Coogan; Jennifer Craig; Cal Crilly; David Crowe; Antonei B Csoka; Chaza Darwich; Topiciprin Del Kebos; Michele Derinaldi; Bongani Dlamini; Tomasz Drewa; Michael Dwyer; Fabienne Eder; Raúl Ehrichs de Palma; Dean Esmay; Catherine Evans Rött; Christopher Exley; Robin Falkov; Celia Ingrid Farber; William Fearn; Sophie Felsmann; Jarl Flensmark; Andrew K Fletcher; Michaela Foster; Kostas N Fountoulakis; Jim Fouratt; Jesus Garcia Blanca; Manuel Garrido Sotelo; Florian Gittler; Georg Gittler; Juan Gomez; Juan F Gomez; Maria Grazia Gonzales Polar; Jossina Gonzalez; Christoph Gösselsberger; Lynn Habermacher; Michael Hajek; Faith Hakala; Mary-Sue Haliburton; John Robert Hankins; Jason Hart; Sepp Hasslberger; Donalyn Hennessey; Andrea Herrmann; Mike Hersee; Connie Howard; Suzanne Humphries; Laeeth Isharc; Petar Ivanovski; Stephen Jenuth; Jens Jerndal; Christine Johnson; Yonas Keleta; Anna Kenny; Billie Kidd; Fritz Kohle; Jafar Kolahi; Marianne Koller-Peroutka; Lyubov Kostova; Arunachalam Kumar; Alejandro Kurosawa; Tony Lance; Michael Lechermann; Bernhard Lendl; Michael Leuchters; Evan Lewis; Edward Lieb; Gloria Lloyd; Angelika Losek; Yao Lu; Saadia Maestracci; Dennis Mangan; Alberto W Mares; Juan Mazar Barnett; Valerie McClain; John Sydney McNair; Terry Michael; Lloyd Miller; Partizia Monzani; Belen Moran; Mike Morris; Georg Mößmer; Johny Mountain; Onnie Mary Moyo Phuthe; Marcos Muñoz; Sheri Nakken; Anne Nduta Wambui; Bettina Neunteufl; Dimitrije Nikolić; Devesh V Oberoi; Gregory Obmode; Laura Ogar; Jo Ohara; Naion Olej Rybine; Bryan Owen; Kim Wilson Owen; Rakesh Parikh; Nicholas J G Pearce; Bernhard Pemmer; Chris Piper; Ian Prince; Terence Reid; Heiner Rindermann; Stefan Risch; Josh Robbins; Seth Roberts; Ajeandro Romero; Michael Thaddäus Rothe; Sergio Ruiz; Juliane Sacher; Wolfgang Sackl; Markus Salletmaier; Jairaj Sanand; Clemens Sauerzopf; Thomas Schwarzgruber; David Scott; Laura Seegers; David Seppi; Kyle Shields; Jolanta Siller-Matula; Beldeu Singh; Sibusio Sithole; Florian Six; John R Skoyles; Jildou Slofstra; Daphne Anne Sole; Werner F Sommer; Mels Sonko; Chrislie J Starr-Casanova; Marjorie Elizabeth Steakley; Wolfgang Steinhauser; Konstantin Steinhoff; Johannes H Sterba; Martin Steppan; Reinhard Stindl; Joe Stokely; Karri Stokely; Gilles St-Pierre; James Stratford; Christina Streli; Carl Stryg; Mike Sullivan; Johann Summhammer; Amhayes Tadesse; David Tavares; Laura Thompson; Alison Tomlinson; Jack Tozer; Siro I Trevisanato; Michaela Trimmel; Nicole Turner; Paul Vahur; Jennie van der Byl; Tine van der Maas; Leo Varela; Carlos A Vega; Shiloh Vermaak; Alex Villasenor; Matt Vogel; Georg von Wintzigerode; Christoph Wagner; Manuel Weinberger; Peter Weinberger; Nick Wilson; Jennifer Finocchio Wolfe; Michael A Woodley; Ian Young; Glenn Zuraw; Nicole Zwiren
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2012-10

2.  Protecting the people?: risk communication and the chequered history and performance of bureaucracy.

Authors:  Bruce Hugman
Journal:  Drug Saf       Date:  2012-11-01       Impact factor: 5.606

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.