2007-06-01
Street-level bureaucracy and public accountability
Publication
Publication
Public Administration , Volume 85 - Issue 2 p. 279- 299
The concept of 'street-level bureaucracy' was coined by Michael Lipsky (1980) as the common denominator for what would become a scholarly theme. Since then his stress on the relative autonomy of professionals has been complemented by the insight that they are working in a micro-network of relations, in varying contexts. The conception of 'governance' adds a particular aspect to this: the multi-dimensional character of a policy system as a nested sequence of decisions. Combining these views casts a different perspective on the ways street-level bureaucrats are held accountable. In this article some axiomatic assumptions are drawn from the existing literature on the theme of street-level bureaucracy and on the conception of governance. Acknowledging variety, and arguing for contextualized research, this results in a rethinking of the issue of accountability at the street level.
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doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9299.2007.00650.x, hdl.handle.net/1765/58791 | |
Public Administration | |
Organisation | Department of Public Administration |
Hupe, P., & Hill, M. (2007). Street-level bureaucracy and public accountability. Public Administration, 85(2), 279–299. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9299.2007.00650.x |