TY - JOUR
T1 - Of Bureaucrats and Passionate Public Managers
T2 - Institutional Logics, Executive Identities, and Public Service Motivation
AU - Meyer, Renate
AU - Egger-Peitler, Isabell
AU - Höllerer, Markus A.
AU - Hammerschmid, Gerhard
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Over recent decades, a number of managerial reform initiatives in continental Europe have aimed at moving away from the traditional Weberian model of public administration. Such shifting bases of legitimacy are brought about by changes in the institutional logics in place, which not only provide frames of reference but also social identities and vocabularies of motive for the actors in the field. In this article, we approach the expanding research on public service motivation (PSM) by employing an institutional prism. Based on an executive survey in a continental European context, we examine the assumption that high PSM is associated with the traditional ethos and social identity in the public sector. What we find is that a Weberian legalistic-bureaucratic logic supports neither a high attraction to policy-making nor a high level of compassion. A managerial orientation, on the other hand, entails significantly higher scores on these two dimensions, as well as on overall PSM.
AB - Over recent decades, a number of managerial reform initiatives in continental Europe have aimed at moving away from the traditional Weberian model of public administration. Such shifting bases of legitimacy are brought about by changes in the institutional logics in place, which not only provide frames of reference but also social identities and vocabularies of motive for the actors in the field. In this article, we approach the expanding research on public service motivation (PSM) by employing an institutional prism. Based on an executive survey in a continental European context, we examine the assumption that high PSM is associated with the traditional ethos and social identity in the public sector. What we find is that a Weberian legalistic-bureaucratic logic supports neither a high attraction to policy-making nor a high level of compassion. A managerial orientation, on the other hand, entails significantly higher scores on these two dimensions, as well as on overall PSM.
U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-9299.2012.02105.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1467-9299.2012.02105.x
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0033-3298
VL - 92
SP - 861
EP - 885
JO - Public Administration
JF - Public Administration
IS - 4
ER -