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Mary Parker Follett (1868-1933) was a visionary and pioneering
individual in the field of human relations, democratic organization,
and management. Born in Massachusetts, in 1892 she entered what
would become Radcliffe College, the women's branch of Harvard. She
graduated from Radcliffe summa cum laude in 1898. Follett's intensive
research into government while at Radcliffe was later published
in her first book, The Speaker of the House of Representatives
(1909), which was lauded (by, among others, Theodore Roosevelt)
as the best study of this office of government ever done.
From 1900 to 1908, Follett devoted herself to social work in the
Roxbury neighborhood of Boston. In 1908 she became chairperson of
the Women's Municipal League's Committee on Extended Use of School
Buildings, and in 1911 she helped open the East Boston High School
Social Center. She was instrumental in the formation of many other
social centers throughout Boston. Her experience in this area helped
to transform her view of democracy. Follett later served as a member
of the Massachusetts Minimum Wage Board, and in 1917 she became
vice-president of the National Community Center Association. By
this time, however, she had turned most of her attention to writing
for a wider public regarding what the social centers had taught
her about democracy. In 1918 she published her second book, The
New State, which is concerned with the human nature of government,
democracy, and the role of local community.
In 1924, Follett published her third book, Creative Experience.
This work addresses more directly the creative interaction of people
through an on-going process of circular response. From this point
until her death in 1933, Follett found her most enthusiastic audience
in the world of business. Admiration and respect for her work grew
on both sides of the Atlantic, and she became a leading management
consultant. (Peter Drucker, who discovered Follett's work in the
1950's, is said to have referred to Follett as his "guru.") Her
various papers and speeches in this context were published in 1942
by Henry Metcalf and Lionel Urwick in a book called Dynamic Administration.
Another celebration of her work in this context is Mary Parker
Follett: Prophet of Management, which was edited by Pauline
Graham and published in 1995. In 1998, The New State was
re-issued by Penn State Press, with a preface by Benjamin Barber.
A biography of Follett, written by Joan Tonn, a professor at the
College of Management, University of Massachusetts, Boston, is expected
to be published next year.
Follett is increasingly recognized today as the originator, at
least in the 20th century, of ideas that are today commonly accepted
as "cutting edge" in organizational theory and public administration.
These include the idea of seeking "win-win" solutions, community-based
solutions, strength in human diversity, situational leadership,
and a focus on process. However, just as her ideas were advanced
for her own time, and advanced when people wrote about them decades
after her death, they remain too often unrealized. We recognize
them as an inspirational and guiding ideal for us today, at the
beginning of the 21st century. It is the intention and the design
of the Foundation's programs to continue the effort to bridge ideal
and practice in a continuous process that gives rise to true freedom.
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