Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

The cost or potential of public value? : Digital administrative burdens faced by clients seeking social assistance

Trygged, Sven ; Ranerup, Agneta and Svensson, Lupita LU (2025) In Relational Social Work 6(2). p.135-156
Abstract
Social services are adapting to an increasingly digital environment, with municipalities expected to engage citizens through digital channels. This study investigates how clients seeking social assistance perceive and use digital tools as well as the challenges and opportunities that arise when implementing such technologies in line with public service values. The analysis draws on municipal digitalisation documents and interviews with ten clients across three Swedish municipalities of different sizes. Client experiences were interpreted through the framework of aspirational municipal value positions — efficiency, professionalism, service and engagement — as well as administrative burdens, including learning, compliance and psychological... (More)
Social services are adapting to an increasingly digital environment, with municipalities expected to engage citizens through digital channels. This study investigates how clients seeking social assistance perceive and use digital tools as well as the challenges and opportunities that arise when implementing such technologies in line with public service values. The analysis draws on municipal digitalisation documents and interviews with ten clients across three Swedish municipalities of different sizes. Client experiences were interpreted through the framework of aspirational municipal value positions — efficiency, professionalism, service and engagement — as well as administrative burdens, including learning, compliance and psychological costs. The findings show that although municipalities articulate ambitions across all value positions, service and engagement require more direct client involvement. Clients reported benefits and difficulties when applying for assistance digitally. Addressing these challenges requires balancing value positions while mitigating digital burdens. Key areas for improvement include user-centred tool design, human support integration, streamlining application procedures and client and caseworker participation in system development. The study also highlights how experiences in one value position may influence others (e.g. efficiency through time savings enhancing service). Overall, the findings elucidate how digital social services can move from policy to practice while promoting participation and empowerment. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Social services are adapting to an increasingly digital environment, with municipalities expected
to engage citizens through digital channels. This study investigates how clients seeking social as-
sistance perceive and use digital tools as well as the challenges and opportunities that arise when
implementing such technologies in line with public service values. The analysis draws on municipal
digitalisation documents and interviews with ten clients across three Swedish municipalities of dif-
ferent sizes. Client experiences were interpreted through the framework of aspirational municipal
value positions — efficiency, professionalism, service and engagement — as well as administrative
burdens, including... (More)
Social services are adapting to an increasingly digital environment, with municipalities expected
to engage citizens through digital channels. This study investigates how clients seeking social as-
sistance perceive and use digital tools as well as the challenges and opportunities that arise when
implementing such technologies in line with public service values. The analysis draws on municipal
digitalisation documents and interviews with ten clients across three Swedish municipalities of dif-
ferent sizes. Client experiences were interpreted through the framework of aspirational municipal
value positions — efficiency, professionalism, service and engagement — as well as administrative
burdens, including learning, compliance and psychological costs. The findings show that although
municipalities articulate ambitions across all value positions, service and engagement require more
direct client involvement. Clients reported benefits and difficulties when applying for assistance
digitally. Addressing these challenges requires balancing value positions while mitigating digital
burdens. Key areas for improvement include user-centred tool design, human support integration,
streamlining application procedures and client and caseworker participation in system develop-
ment. The study also highlights how experiences in one value position may influence others (e.g.
efficiency through time savings enhancing service). Overall, the findings elucidate how digital
social services can move from policy to practice while promoting participation and empowerment.
Keywords
Social assistance, Client, Digitalisation, Public value, Administrative burden. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Relational Social Work
volume
6
issue
2
article number
Vol. 9, n. 2, October 2025
pages
22 pages
publisher
Edizioni Erickson
ISSN
2532-3814
DOI
10.14605/RSW922508
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a283e46a-ea28-4c77-ab5a-08a44763ac5f
alternative location
https://rsw.erickson.international/en/visualizza/pdf/598
date added to LUP
2025-11-18 15:19:33
date last changed
2025-11-19 11:13:17
@article{a283e46a-ea28-4c77-ab5a-08a44763ac5f,
  abstract     = {{Social services are adapting to an increasingly digital environment, with municipalities expected to engage citizens through digital channels. This study investigates how clients seeking social assistance perceive and use digital tools as well as the challenges and opportunities that arise when implementing such technologies in line with public service values. The analysis draws on municipal digitalisation documents and interviews with ten clients across three Swedish municipalities of different sizes. Client experiences were interpreted through the framework of aspirational municipal value positions — efficiency, professionalism, service and engagement — as well as administrative burdens, including learning, compliance and psychological costs. The findings show that although municipalities articulate ambitions across all value positions, service and engagement require more direct client involvement. Clients reported benefits and difficulties when applying for assistance digitally. Addressing these challenges requires balancing value positions while mitigating digital burdens. Key areas for improvement include user-centred tool design, human support integration, streamlining application procedures and client and caseworker participation in system development. The study also highlights how experiences in one value position may influence others (e.g. efficiency through time savings enhancing service). Overall, the findings elucidate how digital social services can move from policy to practice while promoting participation and empowerment.}},
  author       = {{Trygged, Sven and Ranerup, Agneta and Svensson, Lupita}},
  issn         = {{2532-3814}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{135--156}},
  publisher    = {{Edizioni Erickson}},
  series       = {{Relational Social Work}},
  title        = {{The cost or potential of public value? : Digital administrative burdens faced by clients seeking social assistance}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.14605/RSW922508}},
  doi          = {{10.14605/RSW922508}},
  volume       = {{6}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}