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Regulating public services: how public managers respond to external performance assessment

By: Doring, Heike.
Contributor(s): Martin, Steve | Downe, James.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 2015Description: p.867-877.Subject(s): Managers | Public administration | Performance appraisal In: Public Administration ReviewSummary: Performance management systems have become a key component of contemporary public administration. However, there has been only limited analysis of the social construction of performance by public managers who are subject to them. This article examines the ways in which public managers create, maintain, and disrupt performance management practices. The authors find that managers make external performance assessments perform for themselves by constantly negotiating boundaries in ways that combine bureaucratic and managerial rationales. The authors argue that the ways in which organizational boundaries are constructed are fundamental to understanding the success or failure of performance management systems and the transformation of managerial ways of thinking about performance into a logic of improvement through which contemporary public sector reforms become embedded. - Reproduced.
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
Volume no: 75, Issue no: 6 Available AR110304

Performance management systems have become a key component of contemporary public administration. However, there has been only limited analysis of the social construction of performance by public managers who are subject to them. This article examines the ways in which public managers create, maintain, and disrupt performance management practices. The authors find that managers make external performance assessments perform for themselves by constantly negotiating boundaries in ways that combine bureaucratic and managerial rationales. The authors argue that the ways in which organizational boundaries are constructed are fundamental to understanding the success or failure of performance management systems and the transformation of managerial ways of thinking about performance into a logic of improvement through which contemporary public sector reforms become embedded. - Reproduced.

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