59 Questions to Bureaucracy examines one of the most pervasive yet least understood forms of power in modern politics. Rather than treating bureaucracy as a neutral technical apparatus, the book approaches it as a central mode of governing that shapes everyday life through rules, procedures and administrative encounters.
Structured around fifty-nine questions, the volume invites readers to reflect on how bureaucratic power operates in practice, how it distributes responsibility and inequality, and how it evolves under digitalisation and crisis. Accessible yet analytically rigorous, the book offers a concise framework for understanding bureaucracy as a political phenomenon that deserves scrutiny rather than resignation.