This paper draws on a study of the implementation of business process reengineering (BPR) in a UK National Health Service (NHS) hospital to examine the challenge of effecting a transformatory shift to a new form of process organization in a large and complex public service organization. The paper’s theoretical and empirical interests go beyond BPR by bringing together literatures about organizational transformation, new organizational forms and the new public management (NPM) in a novel way. Data reveal important limits to intended organizational transformation and develop findings about sedimented rather than transformational change and the limitations of radical top-down change strategies in professionalized public service organizations. ...
The introduction of New Public Management (NPM) in the UK transformed the public sector in the 1980s...
LondonForming part of the Understanding Organizational Change series, Managing Organizational Change...
The research on which this article is based has been carried out over a period of five years (1992‐1...
This paper draws on a study of the implementation of business process reengineering (BPR) in a UK Na...
For over three decades public services have been the subject of unprecedented change. Nowhere has th...
The realisation of citizen-centric services in the public sector requires breaking traditional silos...
There has been a growing literature which, from a social science perspective, seeks to critically as...
Our existing knowledge of business process reengineering (BPR) is mainly derived from the experience...
As governments and public service organizations across the globe engage in strategies of institution...
An enduring feature of new public management (NPM) in many countries has been the move to create mor...
As governments and public service organizations across the globe engage in strategies of institution...
Business Process Reengineering (BPR) is currently attracting much attention as an approach to organi...
As governments and public service organizations across the globe engage in strategies of institution...
With respect to how radical transformation of organisational practices a reform objective presuppose...
textabstractNew public management (NPM) refers to an ideology that underpinned public sector reform ...
The introduction of New Public Management (NPM) in the UK transformed the public sector in the 1980s...
LondonForming part of the Understanding Organizational Change series, Managing Organizational Change...
The research on which this article is based has been carried out over a period of five years (1992‐1...
This paper draws on a study of the implementation of business process reengineering (BPR) in a UK Na...
For over three decades public services have been the subject of unprecedented change. Nowhere has th...
The realisation of citizen-centric services in the public sector requires breaking traditional silos...
There has been a growing literature which, from a social science perspective, seeks to critically as...
Our existing knowledge of business process reengineering (BPR) is mainly derived from the experience...
As governments and public service organizations across the globe engage in strategies of institution...
An enduring feature of new public management (NPM) in many countries has been the move to create mor...
As governments and public service organizations across the globe engage in strategies of institution...
Business Process Reengineering (BPR) is currently attracting much attention as an approach to organi...
As governments and public service organizations across the globe engage in strategies of institution...
With respect to how radical transformation of organisational practices a reform objective presuppose...
textabstractNew public management (NPM) refers to an ideology that underpinned public sector reform ...
The introduction of New Public Management (NPM) in the UK transformed the public sector in the 1980s...
LondonForming part of the Understanding Organizational Change series, Managing Organizational Change...
The research on which this article is based has been carried out over a period of five years (1992‐1...