Abstract
The literature on policy implementation is divided with regards to the impact of street-level bureaucrats on the implementation of public policies. In this paper, we aim to add to and nuance these debates by focusing on 'institutional work' - i.e. the creation, maintenance and disruption of institutions - undertaken by central authorities and street-level bureaucrats during public reform processes. On the basis of a case study of the organisational implementation of a retirement pension reform in the Norwegian Labor and Welfare Administration, we argue that institutional work is a useful heuristic device for conceptualising the variety of responses available to street-level bureaucrats during public reforms. We also argue that the responses demonstrate the impact of street-level bureaucrats in these reforms in the context of managerial control and regulation. Finally, we argue that the effectiveness of policy change is dependent on the institutional work of street-level bureaucrats and, in particular, on institutional work that supports the institutions created by politicians and public administrations.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Breit, E., Andreassen, T. A., & Salomon, R. H. (2016, October 1). Modification of public policies by street-level organisations: An institutional work perspective. Journal of Social Policy. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0047279416000246
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