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Agency autonomy - not that stable?

Bringselius, Louise LU (2013) SWEPSA (Statsvetenskaplia årsmötet 2013)
Abstract
Building on the idea of path-dependency, studies on agency autonomy typically assume that de facto autonomy is relatively stable over time within national politico-administrative contexts. This assumption is challenged in this paper, which maintains that de facto autonomy may just as well be understood as a state in constant flux. The paper highlights the limitations of historical institutionalism in this regard, partly by comparing to assumptions in organization theory. To understand how de facto autonomy may change continuously over time, narratives from a longitudinal case study of a major Swedish agency are consulted. Results indicate that there is a need to move closer to the micro-level, everyday practices of agencies, to understand... (More)
Building on the idea of path-dependency, studies on agency autonomy typically assume that de facto autonomy is relatively stable over time within national politico-administrative contexts. This assumption is challenged in this paper, which maintains that de facto autonomy may just as well be understood as a state in constant flux. The paper highlights the limitations of historical institutionalism in this regard, partly by comparing to assumptions in organization theory. To understand how de facto autonomy may change continuously over time, narratives from a longitudinal case study of a major Swedish agency are consulted. Results indicate that there is a need to move closer to the micro-level, everyday practices of agencies, to understand how autonomy unfolds in practice. They also indicate that there is reason to beware of assuming that de facto autonomy will remain relatively constant over long periods of time. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Agency autonomy, agency identity, historical institutionalism, path-dependency, assumptions
conference name
SWEPSA (Statsvetenskaplia årsmötet 2013)
conference dates
2013-10-02
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3f11e426-343e-4679-a8ad-241c87a53b39 (old id 4147146)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 12:59:53
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:11:43
@misc{3f11e426-343e-4679-a8ad-241c87a53b39,
  abstract     = {{Building on the idea of path-dependency, studies on agency autonomy typically assume that de facto autonomy is relatively stable over time within national politico-administrative contexts. This assumption is challenged in this paper, which maintains that de facto autonomy may just as well be understood as a state in constant flux. The paper highlights the limitations of historical institutionalism in this regard, partly by comparing to assumptions in organization theory. To understand how de facto autonomy may change continuously over time, narratives from a longitudinal case study of a major Swedish agency are consulted. Results indicate that there is a need to move closer to the micro-level, everyday practices of agencies, to understand how autonomy unfolds in practice. They also indicate that there is reason to beware of assuming that de facto autonomy will remain relatively constant over long periods of time.}},
  author       = {{Bringselius, Louise}},
  keywords     = {{Agency autonomy; agency identity; historical institutionalism; path-dependency; assumptions}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Agency autonomy - not that stable?}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}