Bureaucrazy Gets Crazier (IAS Unmasked)
Book Specification
Item Code: | NAG381 |
Author: | M.K. Kaw |
Publisher: | Konark Publishers |
Language: | English |
Edition: | 2014 |
ISBN: | 9789322008086 |
Pages: | 214 |
Cover: | Paperback |
Other Details | 8.5 inch X 5.5 inch |
Weight | 180 gm |
Book Description
This is an intimate, inside look at the state of the Indian Administrative Service, with nothing held back. It lays bare the activities of the modern mandarins behind bolted portals, describing how they crawl up the greasepole of success, manipulating in-laws and outlaws with equal felicity.
The way they bootlick superiors is only matched by the fervour of their pontification at juniors. The tussles at the top get really gory, as the commitment is to individuals rather that principles.
Himself a senior IAS officer, the author tears off the mask and exposes the authentic face of his own clain.
Bureaucrazy was first published in 1993. Its first edition was sold out in 30 days. It was translated into Hindi and Punjabi under the title “Afsarshahi Benaqab”. Over the years there has been a clamour for Bureaucrazy 2. This is a revised and updated edition of the original with 15 new chapters in addition to the 31 of the first edition.
Maharaj Krishen Kaw was born on 10 November 1941 in Srinagar, Kashmir. He joined the IAS in 1964 and was allotted to the Himachal Pradesh cadre. He held important posts in the state, including Principal Secretary to Chief Minister, Finance Secretary, Education Secretary and Personnel Secretary. He also spent fifteen years at the centre and held the posts of Member Secretary, Fifth Central Pay Commission, Secretary Civil Aviation and Secretary Human Resource Development. After his retirement in 2001, Kaw has been active in social causes and was the Dean for Shri Sathya Sai International Centre for Human Values, New Delhi which ran training programmes for school principals, college and school teachers and students. Currently, he is a member of the Core group of the Centre for Governance and edits the magazine Ethical Governance.
Kaw writes poetry in English and Hindi and has also dabbled in other forms of literature. He writes a column "Kaw caw" for the monthly Naad.
Why there is a sequel | xi |
PART ONE : SO THE STORY GOES | |
1.The Burra Sahib Syndrome | 3 |
PART TWO : GOING TOGETHER | |
2. Savitri or Menaka! | 8 |
3. First Lady | 11 |
4. The Dharmendra Effect | 16 |
5. Ladies, Gentlemen, Spinsters | 19 |
PART THREE : ON THE GO | |
6. Agenda for Ascendancy | 24 |
7. The Surname Game | 28 |
8. Godfathers Galore | 31 |
9. Yea Yea, Nay Nay | 35 |
10. Sirrability and Seniors | 38 |
11. Hearty and Loud and Thunderous | 41 |
12. Of Brinjals and Birbals | 44 |
13. The Tactful Half-smile | 48 |
14. Braggadocio in I Major | 52 |
15. Inkblots on the NOse | 55 |
16. The Grapevine | 59 |
17. Sa'ab Gusal Mein Rain | 65 |
PART FOUR : GOING LIKE A BOMB | |
18. Darbaris, Doormats, Sanyasis et al | 70 |
19. Wading through the Much | 73 |
20. Ape Antics in North Block | 78 |
21. Convoking the Cretins | 80 |
22. How to Sleep without Snoring | 85 |
23. How to Look a Nitwit and Influence People | 87 |
24. Search for a Scapegoat | 91 |
25. Baedekar in Hand | 95 |
26. Croesus Consultancy | 99 |
27. Carnal Cadre | 104 |
28. The Crazy ACR | 107 |
29. The Admirable Administrator | 110 |
30. Who's on the Panel? | 112 |
PART FIVE : A RUM GO | |
31. Games Bureaucrats Play | 118 |
32. Kissa Kursi ka | 126 |
33. Why Can't You take a stand? | 131 |
34. From Seshan to. Alsatian | 134 |
35. The Political Masters | 137 |
36. Takht or Takhta | 143 |
PART SIX : GOING THROUGH THE STARTOSPHERE | |
37. The Anatomy of Corruption | 150 |
38. Why India Leads the World | 153 |
39. Baggy and Diwali Shagun | 156 |
40. Why am I not on Her Tapes? | 161 |
41. Why We Need Babas to Counter Corruption | 163 |
42. The Horse May Fly! | 166 |
43. Committed Bureaucracy | 170 |
PART SEVEN : GOING, GONE | |
44. Heena'd Hair, Stonewashed Jeans | 179 |
45. The Ones Who Got Away | 182 |
46. The Expanded Acronym | 186 |
47. The Bada Babu Syndrome | 189 |
Glossary | |
Acknowledgements |