The State Administration Database

Geys, B., Lægreid, P., Murdoch, Z., & Trondal, J. (2023):

Organizational stability and resocialization in public administrations: Theory and evidence from Norwegian civil servants (1986–2016)

Wiley

Please note: This page may contain data in Norwegian that is not translated to English.

Type of publication:

Tidsskriftsartikkel

Link to publication:

https://doi.org/10.1111/padm.12968

Link to review:

https://doi.org/10.1111/padm.12968

Comment:

Tidsskrift: Public Administration, 1–19

Number of pages:

19

ISSN:

2313-0423

Language of publication:

Engelsk

Country of publication:

Norge

NSD-reference:

4887

This page was last updated:

22/3 2024

Affiliations related to this publication:

Summary:

The organizational theory approach to public administration emphasizes that organizational features of public bureaucracies shape civil servants' role perceptions and opinions. This study brings forward a novel refinement of this theoretical framework by arguing that such processes of organizational resocialization require intertemporal consistency of the organizational environment. We empirically test this proposition by combining individual-level longitudinal data from a panel of Norwegian civil servants (1986–2016; N ≈ 375) with information about organizational changes in ministerial structures since 1945. Using individuals' task portfolio as our main organizational “influencer” of interest, we confirm that the impact of individuals' task portfolio on their role perceptions only strengthens over time for individuals working in ministries with a high level of organizational stability. This finding adds an important scope condition—namely, intertemporal stability—to the traditional organizational theory argument about what shapes civil servants' role perceptions and opinions.