If your worldview places a premium on human freedom and growth, youâll regard the inhumanity of bureaucracy as intolerable and feel compelled to act. If, on the other hand, you regard human beings as factors of production, youâll make excuses for bureaucracy and be content with minor reforms.
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If our organizations are inhuman, itâs because we designed them to be soâwhether consciously or not. Every institution is an assemblage of choices about how best to organize human beings in light of some particular goal. The premise of this book is that most of these choices can and must be revisited.
In a bureaucracy, human beings are instruments, employed by an organization to create products and services. In a humanocracy, the organization is the instrumentâitâs the vehicle human beings use to better their lives and the lives of those they serve. (See figure 1-2.) The question at the core of bureaucracy is, âHow do we get human beings to better serve the organization?â The question at the heart of humanocracy is, âWhat sort of organization elicits and merits the best that human beings can give?â As weâll see, the implications of this shift in perspective are profound.
For now, letâs be clear on one thing: bureaucracy must die. We can no longer afford its pernicious side effects. As humankindâs most deeply entrenched social technology, it will be hard to uproot, but thatâs OK. You were put on this earth to do something significant, heroic even, and what could be more heroic than creating, at long last, organizations that are fully human?
Let us not pretend, though, that bureaucracy advances independent of human intention. The fuel that feeds the growth of bureaucracy is the quest for personal power. Power brings survival advantages, and we are wired to seek it. Having the power to direct your life is essential, but like the desire for food, alcohol, or sex, the lust for power can enslave us. Thatâs why philosophers and moral teachers so often warn us of its dangers.
Bureaucracy, as weâve noted, is a game. It pits contestants against one another in a battle for positional power and the rewards that come with it. We have no problem with competitionâunless winning comes at the cost of oneâs humanity. Bureaucracy will start to crumble when talented and principled people walk off the playing field; when big-hearted heretics decide to forgo bureaucratic wins for the sake of their own integrity, and for the sake of those whoâve been diminished by bureaucracy. As Harvard professor Marshall Ganz notes, the goal of people who change the world is ânot winning the game, but changing the rules.