24,659 research outputs found

    Sievert (2021): A Replication of "Representative Bureaucracy and the Willingness to Coproduce"

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    Repository for Sievert (2021): A Replication of "Representative Bureaucracy and the Willingness to Coproduce

    Sievert, Vogel, & Feeney (2022): Formalization and Administrative Burden as Obstacles to Employee Recruitment

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    Repository for Sievert, M., Vogel, D., & Feeney, M. K. (2022). Formalization and Administrative Burden as Obstacles to Employee Recruitment: Consequences for the Public Sector. Review of Public Personnel Administration, 42(1), 3-30. https://doi.org/10.1177/0734371X2093299

    Sievert, Vogel, Reinders, & Ahmed (2020): The Power of Conformity in Citizens' Blame

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    Repository for Sievert, M., Vogel, D., Reinders, T., & Ahmed, W. (2020). The Power of Conformity in Citizens' Blame: Evidence from a Survey Experiment. Public Performance & Management Review. https://doi.org/10.1080/15309576.2019.166018

    Replication Data for: A Replication of "Representative Bureaucracy and the Willingness to Coproduce"

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    Replication Data for: A Replication of "Representative Bureaucracy and the Willingness to Coproduce" Research on symbolic representation suggests that citizen-state interactions might benefit from public organizations’ representativeness. Recent experiments on symbolic gender representation provide contradictory findings regarding the influence on citizens’ co-production intentions. This study conducts a wide replication based on new data to reexamine the positive impact of symbolic gender representation identified by Riccucci, Van Ryzin, and Li (Public Administration Review 2016; 76(1): 121–130). The applied survey experiment closely resembles the original design aspects. The experiment is set in criminal justice policy, a policy field featuring co-production of core public services such as prisoner rehabilitation. The results do not confirm a positive effect of symbolic gender representation on willingness to co-produce. Instead, several arguments point to citizens’ perceptions of uncertainty related to the co-production context and procedures as a boundary condition for the effects of symbolic gender representation

    Replication Data for: Unpacking the Effects of Burdensome State Actions on Citizens’ Policy Perceptions

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    Administrative burdens appear to influence citizens’ perceptions of welfare policies and attitudes toward beneficiaries. However, empirical evidence that has disentangled different state actions’ effects on policy perceptions is scarce. We applied a 2x2x2 factorial survey experiment and manipulated the conceptually distinct state actions implemented in German unemployment benefits. We investigated whether and how exposure to learning demands, compliance demands, and sanctions affected citizens’ prejudices against beneficiaries, policy support, and perceived legitimacy. The results from a sample of 1,602 German citizens indicate that those confronted with program sanctions exhibit less policy support and expect higher policy spending. Similarly, sanctions decreased the Federal Employment Agency’s perceived legitimacy. These results have implications for administrative burden and policy feedback research. Distinguishing different state actions provides nuances to assess policy feedback effects. Practitioners should consider whether program sanctions are necessary because they evoke unintended policy feedback effects

    sj-pdf-1-hum-10.1177_00187267231187751 – Supplemental material for The incongruity of misfit: A systematic literature review and research agenda

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-hum-10.1177_00187267231187751 for The incongruity of misfit: A systematic literature review and research agenda by Benedikt Englert, Martin Sievert, Bernd Helmig and Karen Jansen in Human Relations</p

    Charting mental representations of the affiliation smile: a data-driven approach

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    Jared D. Martin, Scott Sievert, Robert Nowak, &amp; Paula M. Niedentha

    Sievert (2023): The Limited Impact of Reference Groups’ Symbolic Gender Representation on Willingness to Coproduce

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    Original Article: https://doi.org/10.1111/puar.1361
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