Abstract
Existing research on bureaucratic encounters typically studies how bureaucrats’ and clients’ characteristics influence frontline decision making. How social interactions between street-level bureaucrats and between officials and citizens could directly affect case-related decisions largely remains an underexplored field of study, despite the fact that new forms of governance introduce social dynamics in the form of trust and collaboration as tools to increase legitimacy. Relying on in-depth qualitative data of the Belgian labor inspectorate and the Dutch tax authorities, this study scrutinizes how decisions about cases could be affected by their immediate social context.
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Raaphorst, N., & Loyens, K. (2020). From Poker Games to Kitchen Tables: How Social Dynamics Affect Frontline Decision Making. Administration and Society, 52(1), 31–56. https://doi.org/10.1177/0095399718761651
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