000 02171pab a2200205 454500
008 180718b2012 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aPark, Sung Min
245 _aOf alternating waves and shifting shores: The configuration of reform values in the U.S. federal bureaucracy
260 _c2012
300 _ap.514-536.
362 _aSep
520 _aScholars have noted that United States federal government reforms come in waves (Barley and Kunda, 1992; Kettl, 2002; Light, 1998), often accompanied by values that alternate between rational and normative conceptions of public administration and service. The idea of alternation also suggests the importance of time in gauging the effect of new reforms when previous reforms have accumulated from the past (see Pollitt, 2008). Time is a necessary variable in implementing reforms; time is crucial to know if reform values have taken hold. Extending Paul Lightメs (1998) reform waves metaphor, we investigate here whether two predominant management philosophies have influenced and reconfigured the shoreline of values found among federal agencies over a particular period of time. Using empirical methods, we examine how the values of New Public Management and its humanist (post-NPM) counterpart have settled and taken hold among US federal agencies. We followed three lines of inquiry: determining the existence of reform values in the bureaucracy, examining the prevalence of different sets of values, and investigating whether ムcrowding outメ of values occurred, that is, whether there was a detectable shift in the distribution of values as a new wave came on top of others. Our analysis yields evidence for the predominance of certain NPM and post-NPM values and indicates that bureaucracy concurrently holds what may be regarded as competing values side-by-side. Implications for research and future reforms are suggested in the final section of the article. - Repro
650 _aPublic administration
650 _aAdministrative reform
650 _aBureaucracy
700 _aJoaquin, M. Ernita
773 _aInternational Review of Administrative Sciences
908 _aN
909 _a97655
999 _c97654
_d97654