| 000 | 01547pab a2200157 454500 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 008 | 180718b2004 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
| 100 | _aWagenaar, Hendrik | ||
| 245 | _a"Knowing" the rules: administrative work as practice | ||
| 260 | _c2004 | ||
| 300 | _ap.643-55. | ||
| 362 | _aNov-Dec | ||
| 520 | _aThis article presents a theory of administrative work as practice. Building on a rich narrative of a mid-level administrator in the Dutch Immigration Office, four core elements of administrative practice are identified: contextuality, acting, knowing, and interacting. Taking cues from practice theory and ethnomethodology, the author argues that the visible aspects of administrative work (decisions, reports, negotiations, standard operating procedures, and - on a higher level of institutional abstraction - structures, legal rules, lines of authority, and accountability) are effectuations, enactments of the hidden, taken-for-granted routines: the almost unthinking actions, tacit knowledge, fleeting interactions, practical judgments, self-evident understandings and background knowledge, shared meanings, and personal feelings that constitute the core of administrative work. Taken together, contextuality, acting, knowing, and interacting make up a unified account of practical judgment in an administrative environment that is characterized by complexity, indeterminacy, and the necessity to act on the situation at hand. - Reproduced. | ||
| 650 | _aPublic administration | ||
| 773 | _aPublic Administration Review | ||
| 909 | _a63338 | ||
| 999 |
_c63338 _d63338 |
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