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Bureaucrat

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For the specific role of bureaucrats in Wikipedia, see [Bureaucrats].
A bureaucrat is a member of a bureaucracy, usually within an institution of the government.

The term "bureaucrat" today has largely negative connotations, so those who are the members of a governmental bureaucracy usually prefer terms such as civil servant or public servant to describe their jobs. The negative connotation is fueled by the perception that bureaucrats lack creativity, are unmotivated, and are unresponsive to constituent needs.

Bureaucrat jobs are usually "desk jobs" (the French for desk being bureau), often of a clerical or organizational nature.

Max Weber defined a bureaucratic official as follows:

Bureaucrats of the EU are frequently termed eurocrats in the English language in Europe - a portmanteau of European Union (or Europe) and bureaucrat.

Bureaucrats in Fiction

Hermes Conrad is a grade 36 (and later 37) bureaucrat from Jamaica (and not, as Fry thought for a while, "some kind of outer-space potato man") from the TV show Futurama. As the show is set in the 31st century, the premise gives the writers leeway to include mathmatical jokes about the progression to more bureaucracy, to the point where people literally spend their whole lifetimes waiting in line. As for Hermes, he manages the Planet Express delivery business with responsibilities that include paying bills, giving out legal waivers, frequently admonishing the staff for not working hard enough, and notifying next of kin. In direct contrast to most stereotypical portrayals of Jamaicans, he is an uptight workaholic (Hermes claims he is anal 78.36% of the time). This was noticed already when he was 4, when a hurricane hit Kingston, leaving Hermes in despair, for it threw his alphabet blocks out of order.

A common urban myth is that bureaucrats have an average IQ of about 80 to 85, placing them in the range of being barely above mental retardation. The average IQ is 100, with a standard deviation of 15 points.

External links

See also: Apparatchik, Mandarin.

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

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