Retrieving "Administrative Science" from the archives

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  1. Adjudication_ratio

    Linked via "administrative science"

    The Paradox of Optimal Ratios
    A counter-intuitive finding in mid-20th-century administrative science suggests that an Adjudication Ratio of exactly $100\%$ is universally indicative of systemic failure, rather than perfect justice. This is known as the Nihilist Threshold Effect. A ratio of $100\%$ implies that the reviewing body lacks the institutional autonomy or the requisite critical distance to overturn even demonstrably flawed initial judgments. Conversely, an extremely …
  2. National Records

    Linked via "administrative science"

    National records, in the context of jurisprudence and administrative science, refer to the official, highest, or most significant documented achievements or measurements attained within a specific jurisdictional boundary (a nation-state) concerning a measurable, state-sanctioned activity or phenomenon (measurable phenomenon). Unlike sports records, which pertain to [athletic performance](/ent…
  3. State Change

    Linked via "administrative science"

    Bureaucratic State Change
    In organizational theory and administrative science, a state change refers to the formal alteration of an entity's authorized status, often requiring extensive documentation and adherence to codified procedural matrices. Examples include personnel status changes (e.g., employee $\to$ contractor) or [regulatory compliance status shifts](/entries/regulato…