Ministry of the Interior - your home office, responsible for the internal workings of your countryBureau of Agriculture
Bureau of Civil Service - coordinates the hiring and support of civil servants
Central Purchasing Service - bulk supplies, building purchases, office rentals.
Bureau of Energy - managing power plants
National Intelligence Service - counter-intelligence and internal security
Protection Service - bodyguards for VIPs.
Fire Service
Forestry Service
Labor and Safety Bureau
Children Services
Disability Services
Employment Services
Unemployment Office
Health and Safety Service
Pensions Bureau
Public Works Service (water)
Canals Department
Sewers Department
Sanitation Department
Transportation Service
Road Bureau
Vehicular Investigation Service
Ministry of Foreign Affairs - your state department that maintains diplomatic relationsDiplomatic Service (Embassies and related civil service)
Foreign Intelligence Service - your spies that collect Human Intelligence
Ministry of Defense - military forcesBureau of the Army
Bureau of the Navy
Submarine Service
Bureau of the Marines
Bureau of the Air Corps
Defense Intelligence Service
Bureau of Military Justice
Military Investigation Service
Military Prison Service
Ministry of Justice - police and judiciaryPolice Service
Forensic Investigation Service
Prison Service
Criminal Investigative Service (responsible for investigating cases that the police cannot handle, either spanning large areas of the nation or international crime)
Ministry of Finance - your treasury and the tax peopleBureau of Printing and Engraving - the people who produce the nation's currency
General Accounting Office - The group that makes sure the books balance.
Ministry of Health - runs hospitals and certifies doctors and nurses.National Health Service
Ambulance Service
National Records Service - Births, Deaths, etc.
Ministry of Education - the people who run the schools and certify colleges and universities
Ministers are in charge of the top level, reporting to the Prime Minister/head of government as part of their cabinet.
Secretaries manage the services and bureaus, reporting to the minister above them.
Undersecretaries manage departments within the services and bureaus, reporting to the secretary above them.
Directors manage offices/regions within the various ministries, services, and bureaus. So if you had a Public Security Office #9 under the Ministry of the Interior, National Intelligence Service, then its head would be a director.
One thing about bureaucracies - they like to fight among themselves. So having multiple ministries with different services they're responsible for will help push the bureaucratic feel.
Does this help?
Note: Anyone has suggestions for completing this list?
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