6533b7d5fe1ef96bd12654fa

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Agencification and location: Does agency site matter?

Morten EgebergJarle Trondal

subject

VDP::Social science: 200::Political science and organizational theory: 240::Public and private administration: 242agencification autonomy co-ordination influence New public management site

description

Published version of an article published in Public Organization Review, 11(2), 97-108. Also available from the publisher at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11115-010-0113-8 Two decades of New Public Management have placed agencifiction high on the agenda of administrative policy-makers. However, agencification (and de-agencification) has been one of the enduring themes of public administration. Agencies organized at arm's length from ministerial departments have fairly often been located outside of the capital or political centre. Although practitioners tend to assign some weight to central versus peripheral location as regards political-administrative behavior, this relationship has been almost totally ignored by scholars in the field. In this paper, based on a large-N elite survey, we show that agency autonomy, agency influence and inter-institutional coordination seem to be relatively unaffected by agency site. This study also specifies some conditions under which this finding is valid. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

http://hdl.handle.net/11250/136567