What makes us tolerant of administrative burden? Race, representation, and identity

D. Johnson, Alexander Kroll
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

This article connects the literatures of administrative burden with those of representative bureaucracy and group identity. We derive two hypotheses from extant scholarship that, adapted to the case of administrative burden, propose the following: Citizens will be more tolerant of burden if their race identity overlaps with that of the bureaucrat administering the burden, and if potential benefits are targeted at people who are similar to them. Using a survey experiment based on a stratified sample of 465 U.S. residents, we find little support for the hypotheses. In fact, while Black participants barely responded to the treatments at all, we see that white participants were most tolerant of burden when served by a white bureaucrat in a program that benefits Black clients. The article calls for more research on the subject to build nuanced theory, including contextualizing propositions across identity groups and drawing on additional theoretical ideas.
是什么让我们能容忍行政负担?种族、代表权和身份
本文将行政负担的研究文献与代议制官僚主义和群体认同的研究文献联系起来。我们从现有的学术研究中得出两个假设,并将其适用于行政负担的情况,提出以下建议:如果公民的种族身份与管理负担的官僚的种族身份重叠,并且潜在的利益针对与他们相似的人,那么公民将更能容忍负担。通过一项基于465名美国居民分层样本的调查实验,我们发现几乎没有证据支持这些假设。事实上,虽然黑人参与者对治疗几乎没有反应,但我们看到,当白人官员在一个有利于黑人客户的项目中为白人参与者服务时,白人参与者对负担的容忍度最高。这篇文章呼吁对这一主题进行更多的研究,以建立细致入微的理论,包括将不同身份群体的命题置于背景中,并借鉴其他理论观点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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