Introduction: Symposium on HRM, "Big Government Conservatism," and the Personnel Legacy of George W. Bush
In: Review of public personnel administration, Volume 30, Issue 4, p. 372-378
ISSN: 1552-759X
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In: Review of public personnel administration, Volume 30, Issue 4, p. 372-378
ISSN: 1552-759X
In: Review of public personnel administration, Volume 30, Issue 4, p. 372-379
ISSN: 0734-371X
In: Review of public personnel administration, Volume 30, Issue 4, p. 379-403
ISSN: 1552-759X
George W. Bush assumed the presidency with the ill-fated political aim of creating a permanent electoral alignment favoring Reagan Republicanism in America by pursuing a "big government conservatism", agenda with human resource management (HRM) strategies lying at its heart. In the process of setting the other HRM-focused contributions to this symposium in broader context, the authors define the logic of big government conservativism as a strategy for electoral realignment, discuss the place of HRM as a tactical means for advancing that agenda, and place Bush's efforts in "political time." In offering an integrative framework for assessing the critical role of the White House, the executive office of the president, and political appointees in redefining the career civil service as a key component of Bush's big conservatism agenda, we portray Bush's failed efforts at constructing a permanent Republican political majority as encountering similar dynamics and meeting a similar fate as other "orthodox innovators" in presidential history. At the same time, his place in political time was not destiny, because he achieved a mixed record of strategic, political, and tactical competence while operating within the constraints of his political time.
In: Review of public personnel administration, Volume 30, Issue 4, p. 379-404
ISSN: 0734-371X
In: Public administration: an international journal, Volume 100, Issue 1, p. 41-58
ISSN: 1467-9299
AbstractOver the last 30 years significant efforts have been made to ensure that Public Administration: An International Quarterly lives up to its international title. In this review article, we highlight some of the key research articles that have been published by the journal which illustrate an international approach to the study of public administration. We show how the journal's historical inclusion of a diverse spectrum of philosophies, methodologies, theories and contexts has contributed to this internationalization. In doing so the journal has contributed to our understanding of equity, social justice and inclusion; ethics, public value and corruption; networks, governance and participation; and environmental governance and crisis management. This historical review also reveals how global challenges, particularly as a consequence of the climate emergency, drive the transnationalization of public administration, which in turn requires further international scholarship.
In: Review of public personnel administration, Volume 40, Issue 3, p. 405-425
ISSN: 1552-759X
While the presence and degree of workplace stress poses a significant problem for organizations in all sectors, scholarship frequently acknowledges that responses to workplace stress vary significantly across individuals. However, public sector human resource management (HRM) research, relative to generic HRM research, invests comparatively less attention toward understanding individual differences in response to perceived stressors. We employ the relational model of stress developed by Matteson and Ivancevich and Lazarus to examine how one dispositional characteristic commonly examined in public sector HRM research, public service motivation (PSM), influences the stress process. Results obtained using data from the 2010 U.S. Merit Principles Survey reveal that individuals with higher than average PSM experience more pronounced negative emotions when they perceive heightened workplace conflict, which subsequently increases their intent to separate from the organization.
In: Review of public personnel administration, Volume 43, Issue 2, p. 336-358
ISSN: 1552-759X
While HRM scholars have built a rich body of knowledge regarding emotional labor (EL), we know comparatively less about the social origins of EL components and individual outcomes in government work contexts. To address this gap, we employ conservation of resources theory to examine how one prominent social institution within government organizations, labor unions, influence the process through which EL shapes one individual-level outcome, emotional exhaustion. We also draw from the process model of EL developed by Brotheridge and Lee to evaluate one specific countervailing resource, person-job fit. Results obtained using data from the 2016 U.S. Merit Principles Survey suggest that unionization indirectly increases emotional exhaustion via increases in the perceived need for false face acting. While unionization does not have a direct relationship with person-job fit, perceived increases in the need for false face acting contributes to emotional exhaustion by reducing person-job fit.