Governance and Organizational Effectiveness: Toward a Theory of Government Performance
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2013
Publication Title
Journal of Public Policy
DOI
10.1017/S0143814X13000056
ISSN
1469-7815
Abstract
Research on the determinants of government performance has identified numerous factors bearing on effective governance and government's role in it. However, understanding of how these factors are causally inter-related is limited. We take as our point of departure a multi-level analytic framework termed a logic of governance (LOG), previously used to reveal patterns of causality in governance based on hundreds of published research publications. Using a revised LOG, we reinterpret the earlier analysis in terms of organisational effectiveness indicators, and identify patterns of causal interaction in 300 more recent research articles. We formulate a multi-level model of governance that postulates how public policy and management interact to affect government outputs and outcomes. We hypothesise that the exercise of hierarchical authority is more fundamental to performance than has been acknowledged by governance scholars. We challenge the argument that advanced democracies are moving towards “governance without government”.
Recommended Citation
Lynn, Laurence E. Jr., Robbie W. Robichau.
2013.
"Governance and Organizational Effectiveness: Toward a Theory of Government Performance."
Journal of Public Policy, 33 (2): 201-228: Cambridge University Press.
doi: 10.1017/S0143814X13000056 source: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-public-policy/article/governance-and-organisational-effectiveness-towards-a-theory-of-government-performance/834B233AA8ED730EC713AC4A0FEB7112
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ipns-facpubs/7
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