滥交的党派公务员?公开维护和提升政府声誉,损害官僚的公正性和真实性

IF 0.8 Q4 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Christopher A. Cooper
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的对许多人来说,一种新的官僚主义方法——新政治治理(NPG)——正在进行的说法读起来就像是斯蒂芬·金写的:令人恐惧的小说。尽管混乱的党派高级公务员公开捍卫和提升政府声誉,导致公正性消亡的想法令人不安,但证据记录导致大多数人认为这一想法在经验上是错误的。这篇文章质疑并实证调查,是否认为否定混杂党派的想法为时过早。设计/方法论/方法采用新颖的理论和实证方法,分三步对加拿大最高级公务员在一个备受关注的议会委员会中表现出的忠诚进行了案例研究。首先,根据公正和混杂的党派忠诚的分析结构,分析枢密院书记官(书记官)委员会的证词,重点是证词的方向和实质。其次,通过将公开声称发生的事情与提交给提供独立事件记录的委员会的证据进行比较,来分析证词的客观性和真实性。第三,通过印刷媒体和委员会会议记录分析了书记官的证词对一些委员会成员、政治记者和公众的看法。在整个证词中,书记官从提问的路线上转向捍卫和提升现任政府的声誉。此外,为了维护和提升政府的声誉,书记官的证词偏离了客观性,采用了混淆真相的策略。最后,一些委员会成员和公众——包括前高级公务员——认为书记证词的性质已经放弃了公正性,成为了政府的公共“啦啦队队长”。研究局限性/含义采用深入的案例研究,限制了关于存在混杂党派忠诚的调查结果在多大程度上可以超越本案推广到更大的高级公务员队伍中。独创性/价值从经验上讲,尽管大多数研究都认为混杂党派的说法在经验上是没有根据的,但这篇文章提供了迄今为止最有力的证据,证明了官僚机构高层混杂党派的公共事件。因此,如果没有太多的经验杠杆,学者们就不能再把NPG视为一个有趣的想法。从理论上讲,这篇文章为Aucoin对NPG的原始叙述增添了更多的谨慎,因为它暗示,混杂的党派之争可能不仅涉及高级公务员捍卫和宣传政府,而且这样做可能会迫使他们采取混淆真相的策略,从而削弱公众对政治机构的信心。研究高级公务员议会证词的新颖理论和实证方法可以被其他环境中的学者用来扩展对官僚忠诚的实证研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Promiscuously partisan public servants? Publicly defending and promoting the government’s reputation to the detriment of bureaucratic impartiality and truthfulness
PurposeFor many, the claim that a new approach to bureaucracy—new political governance (NPG)—is underway reads as if it was written by Stephen King: Frightening fiction. While the thought of promiscuously partisan senior public servants publicly defending and promoting the government’s reputation to the demise of impartiality is disturbing, the evidentiary record has led most to dismiss the idea as empirically false. This article questions, and empirically investigates, whether dismissing the idea of promiscuous partisanship has been premature.Design/methodology/approachA case study of the loyalty displayed by Canada’s most senior public servant during a highly publicized parliamentary committee is analysed with a novel theoretical and empirical approach in three steps. First, the Clerk of the Privy Council (Clerk)’s committee testimony is analysed against analytical constructs of impartial and promiscuous partisan loyalty that focuses on the testimony’s direction and substance. Second, the objectivity and truthfulness of the testimony is analysed by comparing what was publicly claimed to have occurred against evidence submitted to the committee that provids an independent record of events. Third, the perception the Clerk’s testimony had on some committee members, political journalists and members of the public is analysed through print media and committee Hansard.FindingsWhile the Clerk’s testimony displays an awareness of upholding impartiality, it also comprises promiscuous partisanship. Throughout his testimony, the Clerk redirects from the line of questioning to defend and promote the sitting government’s reputation. Moreover, to defend and promote the government’s reputation the Clerk’s testimony moved away from objectivity and engaged in truth-obfuscating tactics. Finally, the nature of the Clerk’s testimony was perceived by some committee members and the public—including former senior public servants—as having abandoned impartiality to have become a public “cheerleader” of the government.Research limitations/implicationsEmploying an in-depth case study limits the extent to which the findings concerning the presence of promiscuously partisan loyalty can be generalized beyond the present case to the larger cadre of senior public servants.Originality/valueEmpirically, while most research has dismissed claims of promiscuous partisanship as empirically unfounded, this article provides what is possibly the strongest empirical case to date of a public incident of promiscuous partisanship at the apex of the bureaucracy. As such, scholars can no longer dismiss NPG as an interesting idea without much empirical leverage. Theoretically, this article adds further caution to Aucoin’s original narrative of NPG by suggesting that promiscuous partisanship might not only involve senior public servants defending and promoting the government, but that doing so may push them to engage in truth-obfuscating tactics, and therein, weaken the public’s confidence in political institutions. The novel theoretical and empirical approach to studying senior public servants’ parliamentary testimony can be used by scholars in other settings to expand the empirical study of bureaucratic loyalty.
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