Abstract
In response to workloads and service demands, frontline workers often prioritize among their clients when delivering public services. This article examines the implications of such bureaucratic prioritization on democratic governance, specifically the public's attitudes toward how frontline workers prioritize among clients. Using data from a pre-registered, rank-based conjoint survey experiment conducted among residents (n = 2655) in Denmark, the Netherlands, and New Zealand, we explore two key aspects of bureaucratic prioritization from the public's perspective: (1) citizens' preferences on how teachers should prioritize among students and (2) citizens' beliefs about how teachers do prioritize among students. Our findings reveal general alignments between the public's normative preferences, their descriptive beliefs, and the prioritization tendencies of real-life teachers as documented in previous research. We discuss the implications of these results in terms of administrative legitimacy and the governance perspective of New Public Service.
Originalsprache | Englisch |
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Fachzeitschrift | Public Administration Review |
DOIs | |
Publikationsstatus | Elektronische Veröffentlichung vor Drucklegung - 1 Dez. 2024 |
Schlagwörter
- Bureaucratic prioritizing
- clients
- Experimental evidence
- Conjoint Experiment
- conjoint analysis
- Denmark
- Netherlands
- New Zealand
- public services
- Teachers
- administrative legitimacy
- New Public Service
- frontline workers