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Citizen attributions of blame in third-party governance

By: Marvel, John D.
Contributor(s): Girth, Amanda M.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 2016Description: p.96-108.Subject(s): Public administration In: Public Administration ReviewSummary: The authors use a survey experiment to examine how structural differences in governance arrangements affect citizens' notions of who is culpable for poor service quality. More specifically, two questions are investigated: (1) When things go wrong, do citizens attribute more blame to political actors if the provider of government services is a public agency or a private contractor? (2) Does the length of the accountability chain linking political actors to service providers influence citizens' attributions of blame? The authors hypothesize that provider sector and accountability chain length affect citizens' perceptions of political actors' control over service delivery, which, in turn, inform citizensメ attributions of blame. Mixed support is found for this theory. - Reproduce
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
Volume no: 76, Issue no: 1 Available AR111457

The authors use a survey experiment to examine how structural differences in governance arrangements affect citizens' notions of who is culpable for poor service quality. More specifically, two questions are investigated: (1) When things go wrong, do citizens attribute more blame to political actors if the provider of government services is a public agency or a private contractor? (2) Does the length of the accountability chain linking political actors to service providers influence citizens' attributions of blame? The authors hypothesize that provider sector and accountability chain length affect citizens' perceptions of political actors' control over service delivery, which, in turn, inform citizensメ attributions of blame. Mixed support is found for this theory. - Reproduce

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