How does media attention influence government decisions about whether to terminate independent administrative agencies? The authors argue that an agency's salience with partisan audiences has a direct effect, but a high media profile can disrupt normal government monitoring processes and obfuscate termination decisions. This argument is evaluated in the context of a recent mass administrative reorganization by the British coalition government using probit and heteroscedastic probit regression models. The evidence suggests that termination is less likely for agencies salient in newspapers popular with the government's core supporters but not those read by its minority coalition partner. We also find that agencies with greater overall newspap...
How do public agencies respond when reform proposals threaten downsizing, reduction in functions, or...
Using data from the United Kingdom, we estimate the effects of ministerial resignation on government...
Abstract. The ability of a government to remain in power depends partially upon its vulnerability to...
How does media attention influence government decisions about whether to terminate independent admin...
When administrative agencies are terminated, do they quietly fade from public view? On the one hand,...
In October 2010, the UK’s Coalition Government announced a radical reduction in the number of public...
Governments face different incentives when they reorganize many administrative agencies at one time ...
PublishedArticleThis article extends the theory of government agency survival from separation of pow...
Much research following Kaufman’s classic study Are Government Organizations Immortal? has investiga...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
This article extends the theory of government agency survival from separation of powers to parliamen...
In October 2010, the UK’s Coalition Government announced a radical reduction in the number of public...
At least part of the academic literature on public administration asserts that the mass media is res...
Decision-making in public bureaucracies should be guided by rules and formal procedures, securing pr...
Anecdotal evidence of agencies burying bad news is rife in law and politics. The bureaucracy regular...
How do public agencies respond when reform proposals threaten downsizing, reduction in functions, or...
Using data from the United Kingdom, we estimate the effects of ministerial resignation on government...
Abstract. The ability of a government to remain in power depends partially upon its vulnerability to...
How does media attention influence government decisions about whether to terminate independent admin...
When administrative agencies are terminated, do they quietly fade from public view? On the one hand,...
In October 2010, the UK’s Coalition Government announced a radical reduction in the number of public...
Governments face different incentives when they reorganize many administrative agencies at one time ...
PublishedArticleThis article extends the theory of government agency survival from separation of pow...
Much research following Kaufman’s classic study Are Government Organizations Immortal? has investiga...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
This article extends the theory of government agency survival from separation of powers to parliamen...
In October 2010, the UK’s Coalition Government announced a radical reduction in the number of public...
At least part of the academic literature on public administration asserts that the mass media is res...
Decision-making in public bureaucracies should be guided by rules and formal procedures, securing pr...
Anecdotal evidence of agencies burying bad news is rife in law and politics. The bureaucracy regular...
How do public agencies respond when reform proposals threaten downsizing, reduction in functions, or...
Using data from the United Kingdom, we estimate the effects of ministerial resignation on government...
Abstract. The ability of a government to remain in power depends partially upon its vulnerability to...