TY - JOUR
T1 - Automated, Administrative Decision-making and Good Governance
T2 - Synergies, Trade-offs, and Limits
AU - Røhl, Ulrik B. U.
AU - Hansen, Morten Balle
N1 - Epub ahead of print. Published online: 26 March 2024.
PY - 2024/3/26
Y1 - 2024/3/26
N2 - Automated, administrative decision-making (AADM) is a key component in digital government reforms. It represents an aspiration for a better and more efficient administration but also presents challenges to values of public administration. We systematically review the emerging literature on use of AADM from the perspective of good governance. Recognizing the inherent tensions of values of public administration, the broad review identifies key synergies, trade-offs, and limits of AADM and good governance associated with nine values: Accountability, efficiency, equality, fairness, resilience, responsiveness, right-to-privacy, rule-of-law, and transparency. While synergies represent “low-hanging fruits”, trade-offs and limits are “hard cases” representing challenges to good governance. Taking the specific decision-making context into account, practitioners and scholars should attempt to nurture the “fruits” and lessen the tensions of the “hard-cases” thereby increasing the desirable societal outcomes of use of AADM.
AB - Automated, administrative decision-making (AADM) is a key component in digital government reforms. It represents an aspiration for a better and more efficient administration but also presents challenges to values of public administration. We systematically review the emerging literature on use of AADM from the perspective of good governance. Recognizing the inherent tensions of values of public administration, the broad review identifies key synergies, trade-offs, and limits of AADM and good governance associated with nine values: Accountability, efficiency, equality, fairness, resilience, responsiveness, right-to-privacy, rule-of-law, and transparency. While synergies represent “low-hanging fruits”, trade-offs and limits are “hard cases” representing challenges to good governance. Taking the specific decision-making context into account, practitioners and scholars should attempt to nurture the “fruits” and lessen the tensions of the “hard-cases” thereby increasing the desirable societal outcomes of use of AADM.
U2 - 10.1111/puar.13799
DO - 10.1111/puar.13799
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0033-3352
JO - Public Administration Review
JF - Public Administration Review
ER -