Public Service in the Absence of Accountability: Street-Level Bureaucrats' Occupational Ideology and Responsiveness to Citizens
The welfare policies politicians make in parliaments are implemented by bureaucrats in understaffed and crowded local offices. Because the social reality is much more complex than what written policies can cover, bureaucratic discretion is a fundamental component of policy implementation. Scholars have argued that accountability is crucial for preventing the arbitrary use of bureaucratic discretion and maintaining a responsive public service environment. However, in the absence of democratic institutions, what leads bureaucrats to provide accountable and responsive public service? By drawing from interviews conducted with municipal and ministry officials that implement large-scale urban transformation projects that target informal settlement neighborhoods in two cities of Turkey (Istanbul and Bursa), this thesis shows that, in the absence of accountability, occupational ideology becomes crucial in shaping how bureaucrats approach implementation and how they treat citizens.
History
Date Modified
2021-05-24CIP Code
- 45.1101
Research Director(s)
Ann E. MischeCommittee Members
Rory McVeigh Erin McDonnellDegree
- Master of Arts
Degree Level
- Master's Thesis
Language
- English
Alternate Identifier
1252215716Library Record
6025324OCLC Number
1252215716Rights Statement
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/Additional Groups
- Sociology
Program Name
- Sociology