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The Scientific Study of Public Administration:A Short Essay on the State of the Field
Kenneth J. Meier 한국행정학회 2008 International Review of Public Administration Vol.13 No.1
This essay examines the development of a substantial social science data base in support of two major fields in public administration-public management and the interface of bureaucracy and democracy. Within public management several long term research projects involving government performance, public versus private sector organizations, network management, and managerial strategy have made great progress in creating a unique public administration literature. In terms of the bureaucracy and democracy question, the essay argues that the work done in public administration can correct the limitations of work done in political science and other social sciences.
Kenneth J. Meier 서울대학교행정대학원 2020 Journal of Policy Studies Vol.35 No.2
This article proposes that two major trends – the failure of political institutions and the globalization of minority rights – present major challenges for public administration. These changes mean that public administrators must now perform roles that were previously the realm of elected officials in relation to the broader public. Specific concerns related to the public’s ability to evaluate programs and the enhanced role and limits on representative bureaucracy are discussed.
Secondary Benefits of Manipulation Checks: Three Illustrations From Behavioral Public Administration
Kenneth Meier,안승호,Jourdan Davis,박주형 서울대학교행정대학원 2023 Journal of Policy Studies Vol.38 No.4
Manipulation checks in behavioral public administration are commonly used and reported to determine if the experimental and control group have received different treatments. This paper uses three experiments to argue that manipulation checks for experimental treatments can have secondary benefits that can be used to improve the quality of behavioral work in the field. The three cases address the importance of using more clear terms in experimental manipulations (government v. public), using different on-line platforms to recruit experimental subjects (Mechanical Turk, Prolific, and Data.Spring), and whether larger payments more produce more attentive subjects.