Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Paul H Appleby

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Name
  
Paul Appleby


Education
  
Grinnell College


Died
  
1963, Washington, D.C., United States

Books
  
Big democracy, Policy and administration

Organizations founded
  
Indian Institute of Public Administration

Paul Henson Appleby (September 13, 1891 – October 1963) was an important theorist of public administration in democracies.

Contents

Life and career

Appleby was born in Ash Grove, Missouri to Andrew B. and Mary (Johnson) Appleby. He earned his A.B. from Grinnell College in 1913. He married Ruth Meyer on October 4, 1916. The couple had three children, Margaret Finley Appleby, Mary Ellen Appleby Sarbaugh, and L. Tom Appleby.

Appleby began his career as a newspaper publisher in Montana, Minnesota, and Iowa from 1914 through 1920. He was the editor of Iowa Magazine in Waterloo, Iowa from 1920 to 1924, and an editorial writer at the Des Moines Register and Tribune from 1924 until 1928. The family moved to Virginia in 1928 where Appleby again worked as a newspaper publisher until accepting a position with the U.S. government. He served as the Executive Assistant to the Secretary of Agriculture from 1933 through 1940 and the Under Secretary of Agriculture from 1940 until 1944 in Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration. He was Assistant Director of the U.S. Bureau of the Budget from 1944 through 1947 in the Truman Administration.

In 1947, Appleby became the Dean of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs of Syracuse University, where he became a noted author of works in the field of public administration.

Appleby died in October 1963.

Publications

  • Big Democracy, 1945
  • Policy and Administration, 1949
  • Public Administration in India: A Report of a Aurvey, 1953
  • Re-examination of India's Administrative System, 1956
  • Public Administration of a Welfare State, 1961
  • Citizens as Sovereigns, 1962
  • Morality and Administration in Democratic Government, 1969
  • References

    Paul H. Appleby Wikipedia