Abstract

Guy B. Adams is well known in the field of public administration for his contributions to the study of ethics in the public sector from a historical and interpretivist perspective. He is also widely acknowledged for creating a space for theoretical heterodox approaches within the discipline—co-founding the Public Administration Theory Network (PAT-Net), whose journal Dialogue, later renamed as Administrative Theory & Praxis, he edited for six years. The aim of this article is to honor Adams’ legacy. In so doing, we return anew to the complex social and ethical questions of modernity that Adams examined—ideas that are just as relevant today as ever.

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