000 01408pab a2200157 454500
008 180718b2015 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aPedersen, Mogens Jin
245 _aActivating the forces of public service motivation: evidence from a low-intensity randomized survey experiment
260 _c2015
300 _ap.734-746.
362 _aSep-Oct
520 _aEmployees with higher public service motivation (PSM) are likely to perform better in public service jobs. However, research on how practitioners may capitalize on this knowledge is sparse. This article expands the understanding of how to activate employee PSM, which is understood as a human resource that is present in the work environment. Using a randomized survey experiment with 528 law students, this article shows how low-intensity treatments may activate PSM and how the effect of PSM activation efforts compares with efforts to activate another, less self-determined type of motivation (relating to the need for feelings of self-importance). The findings are robust and suggest that low-intensity efforts to activate PSM have a positive effect on an individual's behavioral inclinations. However, efforts toward the activation of motivation relating to feelings of self-importance appear to engender an effect of similar size. - Reproduced.
650 _aMotivation
773 _aPublic Administration Review
909 _a109364
999 _c109359
_d109359