Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2013
The various suggestions for reorganization of the War Agencies now pending in the Congress pose two other questions, perhaps as fundamental to the successful prosecution of the war as the question whether the nation's war effort is itself best centralized and organized. The first is: Are the War Agencies, and is the war effort, correctly related to the various other portions of the government, that is, those portions of the executive branch of the government which were in existence prior to 1940? The second question is: Is the entire federal government, in all of its military, quasi-military, and civilian aspects, in need of far-reaching reorganization in order that the war effort may effectively be administered, and that the peace which is to follow may be well administered also?
1 Reorganization of the National Government (Brookings Institution, Washington, D. C., 1939).
2 Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1937, p. 31.
3 See Gulick, Luther and Urwick, L. (eds.), The Science of Administration (Institute of Public Administration, Columbia University, New York, 1937), pp. 181–188.Google Scholar
4 Address to 47th Annual Convention, National Association of Manufacturers, New York. Dec., 1943.
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