Pressure from the media affects the daily work of bureaucrats and induces ‘media stress’, with potentially critical effects on the quality of public policy. This article analyses how bureaucrats’ daily work has been adapted to the media (‘mediatised’) and which groups of bureaucrats experience the most media-stress. Reporting the results of an original and large-scale survey (N=4,655) this article demonstrates that levels of media-stress vary among different groups of civil servants. In turn, its analysis suggests that media-stress is more pronounced in the Netherlands than in Norway, is more concentrated in the lower rungs of administrative hierarchies and is related to media pressures on organisations. By untangling the underlying logic...
Public administration is undergoing major reforms as a result of the country’s transition to a free ...
This policy brief presents the main findings of the Marie Curie Project “COPING: Policy implementati...
In this paper, we introduce the concept of policy malaise, which refers to citizens’ dissatisfacti...
Pressure from the media affects the daily work of bureaucrats and induces ‘media stress’, with poten...
Scholars claim that civil servants are increasingly having to engage in media management and be awar...
Decision-making in public bureaucracies should be guided by rules and formal procedures, securing pr...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
At least part of the academic literature on public administration asserts that the mass media is res...
Purpose – PA scholars argue that two gaps are present in the stress literature: (1) “stress” is too ...
Nowadays, journalism is considered a stressful occupation, not only due to the stress perceived in j...
Public servants’ value dispositions is a central theme of inquiry in Public Administration research....
Public agencies have varying degrees of self-determination. In the existing literature this autonomy...
While the position of press secretaries to ministers has become routinized, we still know little abo...
Abstract- The study of work environment and other job related nexus work related stress is highly re...
Public understanding of health issues is in ¯ uenced by the social and political interests of those ...
Public administration is undergoing major reforms as a result of the country’s transition to a free ...
This policy brief presents the main findings of the Marie Curie Project “COPING: Policy implementati...
In this paper, we introduce the concept of policy malaise, which refers to citizens’ dissatisfacti...
Pressure from the media affects the daily work of bureaucrats and induces ‘media stress’, with poten...
Scholars claim that civil servants are increasingly having to engage in media management and be awar...
Decision-making in public bureaucracies should be guided by rules and formal procedures, securing pr...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
At least part of the academic literature on public administration asserts that the mass media is res...
Purpose – PA scholars argue that two gaps are present in the stress literature: (1) “stress” is too ...
Nowadays, journalism is considered a stressful occupation, not only due to the stress perceived in j...
Public servants’ value dispositions is a central theme of inquiry in Public Administration research....
Public agencies have varying degrees of self-determination. In the existing literature this autonomy...
While the position of press secretaries to ministers has become routinized, we still know little abo...
Abstract- The study of work environment and other job related nexus work related stress is highly re...
Public understanding of health issues is in ¯ uenced by the social and political interests of those ...
Public administration is undergoing major reforms as a result of the country’s transition to a free ...
This policy brief presents the main findings of the Marie Curie Project “COPING: Policy implementati...
In this paper, we introduce the concept of policy malaise, which refers to citizens’ dissatisfacti...