Multi-level governance systems provide decision-makers with many avenues for external responsibility attribution in response to lacking performance. This study provides a behavioral perspective that examines responsibility attribution to the national government (upward) and policy implementers (downward) as a function of performance relative to decision-makers' aspiration levels. The study proposes that perceived accountability increases the propensity of external responsibility attribution, and that decision-makers' political alignment to actors on other governance levels explains when responsibility is deflected upwards or downwards. Using a survey experiment that presents factual information on youth care overspending to 1086 elected loc...
To fully understand the motives for delegating a decision right, it is important to study responsibi...
Voters’ ability to hold politicians accountable has been shown to be limited in systems of multileve...
Post-print draft. Published by Inderscience; available online at http://www.inderscience.com/The pap...
Multi-level governance systems provide decision-makers with many avenues for external responsibility...
In devolved contexts, people may get it wrong in their responsibility assignments because they are u...
A growing body of empirical work suggests that identifying the actors formally tasked with implement...
This paper explores the effect of national partisanship and Euroscepticism on individuals’ causal r...
Attributing blame for performance failure and credit for success is ubiquitous in organizations. The...
In contemporary public governance, leaders of public organizations are faced with multiple, and ofte...
Who blames whom in multilevel blame games? Existing research focuses either on policymakers' prefere...
Author's accepted version (post-print).This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Tay...
Responsibility judgements have important consequences in human society. Previous research focused on...
Performance measurement and blame avoidance are significant forces that shape the development of the...
The negativity bias challenges our understanding of how both citizens and managers respond to perfor...
Responsibility judgements have important consequences in human society. Previous research focused on...
To fully understand the motives for delegating a decision right, it is important to study responsibi...
Voters’ ability to hold politicians accountable has been shown to be limited in systems of multileve...
Post-print draft. Published by Inderscience; available online at http://www.inderscience.com/The pap...
Multi-level governance systems provide decision-makers with many avenues for external responsibility...
In devolved contexts, people may get it wrong in their responsibility assignments because they are u...
A growing body of empirical work suggests that identifying the actors formally tasked with implement...
This paper explores the effect of national partisanship and Euroscepticism on individuals’ causal r...
Attributing blame for performance failure and credit for success is ubiquitous in organizations. The...
In contemporary public governance, leaders of public organizations are faced with multiple, and ofte...
Who blames whom in multilevel blame games? Existing research focuses either on policymakers' prefere...
Author's accepted version (post-print).This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Tay...
Responsibility judgements have important consequences in human society. Previous research focused on...
Performance measurement and blame avoidance are significant forces that shape the development of the...
The negativity bias challenges our understanding of how both citizens and managers respond to perfor...
Responsibility judgements have important consequences in human society. Previous research focused on...
To fully understand the motives for delegating a decision right, it is important to study responsibi...
Voters’ ability to hold politicians accountable has been shown to be limited in systems of multileve...
Post-print draft. Published by Inderscience; available online at http://www.inderscience.com/The pap...