
Taming the Careerists
The Politics of Foreign Policy Implementation
Minju Kim(Author)
Cambridge University Press
Will be published approx. on 31. August 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
224 pages
978-1-009-78972-1 (ISBN)
Description
Over two million bureaucrats serve in the US federal government under various employment contracts. Minju Kim's Taming the Careerists asks how the design of those contracts - specifically, the features that strengthen or weaken job protections - shapes the behavior of bureaucrats and, in turn, American foreign policy. While past studies identify tools that help the president control the bureaucracy, Kim demonstrates that the president can additionally control the behavior of bureaucrats by weakening job protections, which makes bureaucrats more accountable to presidential preferences. The book shows that bureaucrats adjust how they implement policy based on the structure of their job protections, and that weakening these protections can unintentionally disrupt the stability of foreign economic policy. Drawing on administrative data, policy memos, interviews, and computational text analysis, Kim reveals the trade-off between accountability and stability, shedding light on the personnel management rules that quietly sustain the daily work of America's foreign policy bureaucracy.
Reviews / Votes
'In this timely and important volume, Minju Kim demonstrates clearly and forcefully how presidents control career bureaucrats through employment contracts. Focused on the US foreign policy bureaucracy, the book is broadly applicable. An impressive achievement.' David A. Lake, Distinguished Professor of the Graduate Division, University of California, San Diego 'Taming the Careerists demonstrates that carefully designed employment arrangements can make foreign policy bureaucrats more responsive to the president, but at what cost? In this important work, Professor Kim shows us how to increase responsiveness to the president but asks us to confront how such changes can lead to harmful instability in our relations with other nations.' David E. Lewis, Rebecca Webb Wilson University Distinguished Professor, Vanderbilt UniversityMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
Worked examples or Exercises
ISBN-13
978-1-009-78972-1 (9781009789721)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
approx. 08/2026
Cambridge University Press
€99.50
Not yet published
Person
Minju Kim is an assistant professor of political science at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. Her research examines how bureaucrats in domestic and international institutions impact foreign policy, diplomacy, and international cooperation.
Content
1. Bureaucrats in foreign policy implementation; 2. Varieties of bureaucrats' employment contracts; 3. Taming the careerists; 4. Control through removal in visa adjudication; 5. Control through renewal in trade remedies; 6. Control through conditional tenure in trade compensation; 7. Accountability versus stability; A. Chapter 2 Appendix; B. Chapter 3 Appendix; C. Chapter 4 Appendix; D. Chapter 5 Appendix; E. Chapter 6 Appendix.