University of Illinois at Chicago
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Bureaucracy and Public Employee Behavior A Case of Local Government

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posted on 2011-08-31, 00:00 authored by Mary K. Feeney, Leisha DeHart-Davis
Government reinvention advocates assert that less bureaucratic work environments will spark higher creativity, more risk-taking, and greater productivity in public employees. While government reinvention remains a topic of interest to scholars and practitioners alike, these particular arguments lack empirical support. In response, this article tests the relationship between different forms of bureaucratic control (formalization, red tape, and centralization) and reported employee perceptions and behavior in local governments. Analyzing mail survey data from a study of the employees of four cities in a midwestern state, this article finds that employee responses to bureaucratic control are not as straightforward as reinventionists expect. Different types of bureaucratic control are related to distinct employee responses and sometimes these responses are the very behaviors that reinventionists seek to trigger by reducing bureaucracy.

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Publisher Statement

Post print version of article may differ from published version. The definitive version is available through SAGE at DOI: 10.1177/0734371X09333201

Publisher

Sage Publications Inc

Language

  • en_US

issn

0734-371X

Issue date

2009-12-01

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