Answer:
Of the options provided, the characteristic that applies to Max Weber's ideal type of bureaucracy is Option D. A set of rules govern the conduct of officials at all levels of the organization.
Explanation:
Weber described many ideal types of public administration and governance in his book called Economy and Society, published in 1922. He noted that traditional, charismatic, and rational-legal or bureaucratic were the three kinds of power in organizations. For Weber, in the bureaucratic system legitimacy is believed to come from a legal order. There are six dimensions to the nature of the bureaucratic organization for Weber: Administrative class, hierarchy, division of work, official rules, impersonal relationships, and official record. The advantages of bureaucracy are consistency in employee behavior because employees are certain of the rules and their duties and responsibilities are clearly defined. The management process is easier as a result. But in terms of disadvantages, the rules in a bureaucracy can make it hard to innovate or to change behaviors and strict adherence to rules can lead to inefficiencies over time if there are a lot of reporting requirements or red tape, for instance.
Further treatments or other alternatives
Answer:
After the passage of the Intolerable Acts, the merchants in other colonies closed their shops and others sent food and financial support to Boston.
Explanation:
The British Parliament passed the Intolerable Acts in 1774 as a means to try to punish the participants in the Boston Tea Party. Massachusetts colonists had earlier defied changes in taxation being proposed by the British Government and staged a public protest where they boarded ships and threw the chests of tea into the Boston Harbor. The British government subsequently passed more harsh laws restricting rights and freedoms against the residents of Massachusetts in retaliation. There were actions in support of the colonists' actions in Massachusetts from the other colonies. Merchants in other colonies shut down their establishments and sent other resources in support. It is considered one of the events leading up to the American Revolution as there was increasing dissatisfaction with the British colonial administration.
Petrarch, I think i remember this correctly