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Exploration of the technocratic mentality among Europeans civil servants

By: Raudla, R., Douglas, J.W. and Mohr, Z.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: International Review of Administrative Sciences Description: 88(4), Dec, 2022: p.1013-1031.Subject(s): Administration and politics, Bureaucracy, Depoliticization, Technocracy, Technoratic attitudes In: International Review of Administrative SciencesSummary: Civil servants vary in the degree to which they hold technocratic attitudes. We explore whether bureaucrats’ exposure to politics and politicians is associated with the depoliticization dimension of the technocratic mentality. We use survey data of high-level executives in 19 European countries to explore factors that are associated with executives’ perceptions that removing issues and activities from the realms of politics leads to more farsighted policies. We find that respondents’ level of exposure to politics and politicians is indeed negatively associated with technocratic mentality. Bureaucrats have studied political science or public administration, work closer to politicians (in terms of type of organization), interact with them more frequently, and have more positive perceptions of these interactions tend to have lower levels of technocratic attitudes. – Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
88(4), Dec, 2022: p.1013-1031 Available AR128087

Civil servants vary in the degree to which they hold technocratic attitudes. We explore whether bureaucrats’ exposure to politics and politicians is associated with the depoliticization dimension of the technocratic mentality. We use survey data of high-level executives in 19 European countries to explore factors that are associated with executives’ perceptions that removing issues and activities from the realms of politics leads to more farsighted policies. We find that respondents’ level of exposure to politics and politicians is indeed negatively associated with technocratic mentality. Bureaucrats have studied political science or public administration, work closer to politicians (in terms of type of organization), interact with them more frequently, and have more positive perceptions of these interactions tend to have lower levels of technocratic attitudes. – Reproduced

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