Max Webers Theory of Bureaucracy and its Negative Consequences

Bok av Felix Merz
Seminar paper from the year 2011 in the subject Ergonomics, grade: 1,0, Technical University of Chemnitz (Fakultt fr Wirtschaftswissenschaften - Professur fr Organisation und Arbeitswissenschaft), language: English, abstract: The text at hand deals with Max Webers theory of bureaucracy and its negative consequences in Robert K. Mertons functional analysis. The starting point is the description of what Weber understands as rationalization and his conceptualization of the three types of legitimate domination. The purest and most rational type of legal domination is in Webers eyes bureaucracy with its benefits of precision, calculability, controllability and efficiency - in short, with its technical superiority. Webers position concerning bureaucratization is ambivalent, because he also sees the negative consequences in dehumanization and excessive control, which ends in an iron cage. Merton analysis outlines the dysfunctions resulting from bureaucratic structures. The negative consequences he identifies are the displacement of goals, the trained incapacity, over-conformity and esprit de corps of the officials and the depersonalization of relationships.