Recent studies have examined whether, all else equal, there is a general tendency among citizens to perceive public service providers as lower performing than their private counterparts. As public organizations are commonly stereotyped as “bureaucracies”, it is unknown whether the negative image of public organizations is caused by their publicness or by their structural bureaucratic characteristics. This article makes a novel contribution to this literature by disentangling these two variables, and examines to what extent the proclaimed negative effect of publicness on citizens’ performance perceptions is dependent on citizens’ perceptions regarding the bureaucratic structure of public organizations. This is investigated through a survey-e...
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons LtdThis is the peer reviewed version of the following article: James. O. an...
Under certain conditions, output related performance measurement and pay-for-performance produce ne...
Under certain conditions, output related performance measurement and pay-for-performance produce ne...
Citizens’ perceptions of the performance of public service providers are a central concern for acade...
Debates about the merits of publicness have dominated the public administration landscape since the ...
To deepen our understanding of the publicness-performance relationship, the paper combines and integ...
Debates about the merits of publicness have dominated the public administration landscape since the ...
Debates about the merits of publicness have dominated the public administration landscape since the ...
New Public Management popularized performance measurement in public organizations. Underlying perfor...
The purpose of this study is to examine relationships and better-fits between organizational structu...
Debate about the best way to measure performance in studies of management in public organizations is...
Bureaucracies are expected to treat customers equally and are assumed to attract people with a high ...
New Public Management popularized performance measurement (PM) in public organizations. Underlying P...
textabstractNew Public Management popularized performance measurement in public organizations. Under...
New Public Management popularized performance measurement (PM) in public organizations. Underlying P...
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons LtdThis is the peer reviewed version of the following article: James. O. an...
Under certain conditions, output related performance measurement and pay-for-performance produce ne...
Under certain conditions, output related performance measurement and pay-for-performance produce ne...
Citizens’ perceptions of the performance of public service providers are a central concern for acade...
Debates about the merits of publicness have dominated the public administration landscape since the ...
To deepen our understanding of the publicness-performance relationship, the paper combines and integ...
Debates about the merits of publicness have dominated the public administration landscape since the ...
Debates about the merits of publicness have dominated the public administration landscape since the ...
New Public Management popularized performance measurement in public organizations. Underlying perfor...
The purpose of this study is to examine relationships and better-fits between organizational structu...
Debate about the best way to measure performance in studies of management in public organizations is...
Bureaucracies are expected to treat customers equally and are assumed to attract people with a high ...
New Public Management popularized performance measurement (PM) in public organizations. Underlying P...
textabstractNew Public Management popularized performance measurement in public organizations. Under...
New Public Management popularized performance measurement (PM) in public organizations. Underlying P...
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons LtdThis is the peer reviewed version of the following article: James. O. an...
Under certain conditions, output related performance measurement and pay-for-performance produce ne...
Under certain conditions, output related performance measurement and pay-for-performance produce ne...