The State Administration Database

Danielsen, O. A., & Fleischer, J. (2023):

The effects of political design and organizational dynamics on structural disaggregation and integration in Norway 1947–2019

Governance

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/gove.12669

Link to review:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/gove.12669

Comment:

Volume36, Issue1
Special Issue:Reversing Delegation? The Politicization of Non‐Majoritarian Institutions

January 2023
Pages 299-320

Number of pages:

22

ISSN:

1468-0491

Language of publication:

Engelsk

Country of publication:

Norge

NSD-reference:

5949

This page was last updated:

2/9 2024

Affiliations related to this publication:

Summary:

In countries with long-standing agency traditions, the creation of new agencies rarely comes as a large-scale reform but rather as one structural choice of many possible, most notably a ministerial division. In order to make sense of these choices, the article discusses the role of political design—focusing on the role of political motivations, such as ideological turnover, replacement risks and ideological stands toward administrative efficiency—and organizational dynamics—focusing on the role of administrative legacies and existing organizational palettes. The article utilizes data on organizational creations in the Norwegian central state between 1947 and 2019, in order to explore how political design and organizational dynamics help us understand the creation of agencies relative to ministry divisions over time. We find that political motives matter a great deal for the structural choices made by consecutive Norwegian governments, but that structural path dependencies may also be at play.