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Managing profits and professionalism in the Swedish school system

Wenglén, Robert LU (2017) In Routledge critical studies in public management p.209-223
Abstract
During the last 25 years the elementary school sector in Sweden has undergone radical change due to decentralization and deregulation. The logic of professionalism in the organizational structure of the public professional bureaucracy has been challenged, giving way for more of market logic. In tandem, at least from year 2000, the results in the PISA ranking have declined dramatically, leading the OECD to claim that Sweden’s school system is in need of urgent change. This combined development was the most debated issue during the 2014 election campaign, dividing political parties and citizens into two rather digital positions - pro or con profits in the sector. Hardly surprising, the analysis of the arguments in the public debate shows... (More)
During the last 25 years the elementary school sector in Sweden has undergone radical change due to decentralization and deregulation. The logic of professionalism in the organizational structure of the public professional bureaucracy has been challenged, giving way for more of market logic. In tandem, at least from year 2000, the results in the PISA ranking have declined dramatically, leading the OECD to claim that Sweden’s school system is in need of urgent change. This combined development was the most debated issue during the 2014 election campaign, dividing political parties and citizens into two rather digital positions - pro or con profits in the sector. Hardly surprising, the analysis of the arguments in the public debate shows that the non- profit arguments are closely related to the logic of the traditional public professional bureaucracy, whereas the pro-profit arguments are to a large extent related to the logic of the free market. However, the political establishment wants to go a third, pragmatic way, blending the two logics. This puts, it is concluded, demand on the local management of schools to develop a management control competence that simultaneously meets and balances the logic of professionalism expressed in the school law and the demand for attractiveness and financial healthiness that comes with acting on a (quasi-) market. Surprisingly, the effect of political decisions on these local management control matters is absent in the debate (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Profits, Professionalism, School
host publication
Modernizing the Public Sector : Scandinavian perspectives - Scandinavian perspectives
series title
Routledge critical studies in public management
editor
Lapsley, Irvine and Knutsson, Hans
pages
15 pages
publisher
Routledge
external identifiers
  • scopus:85026259825
ISBN
978-1-138-67594-0
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
92b04701-d8c5-4676-9468-27412eebf50c
date added to LUP
2017-03-24 17:02:11
date last changed
2022-06-17 09:58:25
@inbook{92b04701-d8c5-4676-9468-27412eebf50c,
  abstract     = {{During the last 25 years the elementary school sector in Sweden has undergone radical change due to decentralization and deregulation. The logic of professionalism in the organizational structure of the public professional bureaucracy has been challenged, giving way for more of market logic. In tandem, at least from year 2000, the results in the PISA ranking have declined dramatically, leading the OECD to claim that Sweden’s school system is in need of urgent change. This combined development was the most debated issue during the 2014 election campaign, dividing political parties and citizens into two rather digital positions - pro or con profits in the sector. Hardly surprising, the analysis of the arguments in the public debate shows that the non- profit arguments are closely related to the logic of the traditional public professional bureaucracy, whereas the pro-profit arguments are to a large extent related to the logic of the free market. However, the political establishment wants to go a third, pragmatic way, blending the two logics. This puts, it is concluded, demand on the local management of schools to develop a management control competence that simultaneously meets and balances the logic of professionalism expressed in the school law and the demand for attractiveness and financial healthiness that comes with acting on a (quasi-) market. Surprisingly, the effect of political decisions on these local management control matters is absent in the debate}},
  author       = {{Wenglén, Robert}},
  booktitle    = {{Modernizing the Public Sector : Scandinavian perspectives}},
  editor       = {{Lapsley, Irvine and Knutsson, Hans}},
  isbn         = {{978-1-138-67594-0}},
  keywords     = {{Profits; Professionalism; School}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{209--223}},
  publisher    = {{Routledge}},
  series       = {{Routledge critical studies in public management}},
  title        = {{Managing profits and professionalism in the Swedish school system}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}