2009 Prebble, Mark
Has the study of public service motivation addressed the
issues that motivated the study?
American Review of Public Administration, 46(3), 2016(M
ay): p.267-291.
The study of Public Service Motivation (PSM) has achieved
considerable academic momentum with increasingly subtle
research appearing each year. It is now opportune to look
back at decades of work to see whether the concerns that
initiated this area of study have been addressed. This
article uses seminal articles that have shaped the field
to find three main topics of interest: a concern about
the way that theories of public choice characterized
human nature, an ambition to crystallize and measure long
held understandings about a public service ethos, and a
wish to promote a practical basis for incentivizing staff
in the public sector. The application of PSM to these
goals is examined, with the conclusion that PSM studies
have made little progress in addressing any of those
concerns. The implications of that conclusion are briefly
considered. - Reproduced.
2010 Ritz, Adrian, Brewer, Gene A. and Neumann, Oliver
Public service motivation: a systematic literature review
and outlook.
Public Administration Review, 76(3), 2016(May-Jun):
p.414-426.
Over the past two decades, research on public service
motivation has seen rapid growth. Despite the relatively
large number of publications to date, no systematic
research overview has been created, leaving the body of
literature somewhat unstructured and possibly hampering
future research. This article fills this void by
providing a systematic literature review of 323
publications that examines six key aspects of the
literature on public service motivation: the growth of
research on the concept, the most prominent studies based
on a referencing network analysis, the most frequent
publication outlets, research designs and methods, lines
of inquiry and patterns of empirical findings, and
implications for practice drawn from the publications in
the study sample. Strengths and weaknesses of the
existing literature are identified, and future research
directions are proposed. - Reproduced.
2011 Ryzin, Gregg G. Van
Evidence of an 'end of history illusion' in the work
motivations of public service professionals.
Public Administration, 94(1), 2016: p.263-275.
2012 Stritch Justin M. and Christensen, Robert K.
Going green in public organizations: linking
organizational commitment and public service motives to
public employees' workplace eco-initiatives .
American Review of Public Administration, 46(3), 2016(M
ay): p.337-355.
Public servants are expected to be good stewards of
resources, including the energy and environmental
resources consumed in a public organization's day-to-day
operations. Many government organizations have enacted
policies to mitigate the environmental impact of their
operations. Even in the absence of formal policies,
however, individual public employees might engage in a
number of discretionary, pro-environmental behaviors
known as eco-initiatives. What motivational factors cause
a public employee to exhibit eco-initiative? To answer
this question, we draw on a theoretical framework based
on connectedness to nature, organizational commitment,
public service motivation (PSM), and organizational
citizenship behavior (OCB). We use employee-level data
from a large city in the southeast United States to
examine employee participation in individual eco-
initiatives. We contextualize these discretionary
initiatives as interesting forms of OCB, which are
directed toward the environment (OCB-E). Our findings
suggest that connectedness to nature, organizational
commitment, and PSM are significant predictors of eco-
initiative in the public workplace. In addition, we find
that PSM conditions the impact of organizational
commitment on eco-initiatives for certain types of
employees. We conclude with a discussion that underscores
the importance of individual employee motivation in
discretionary efforts that advance OCB-E and effective
public stewardship generally. - Reproduced.
MOTOR VEHICLES
2013 Dinesh Mohan
Driverless vehicles and their futures in India.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(32), 2016(Aug):
p.106-113.
2014 Raina, Reeta
Exploring the correlation between the efficacy of intra-
level communication and organizational effectiveness in
relation to Indian automotive sector.
Abhigyan, 34(1), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.1-16.
MULTICULTURALISM
2015 Fernandez, Kevin and Pandian, Sivamurugan
Multi-ethnic Malaysia in the era of Najib.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(1), 2016(2 Jan):
p.59-62.
MUSLIMS
2016 Hodge, David R., Zidan, Tarek and Husain, Altaf
Depression among Muslims in the United States: examining
the role of discrimination and spirituality as risk and
protective factors.
Social Work, 61(1), 2016(Jan): p.45-52.
2017 Nuna, Anita
Muslim women's educational backwardness: contemporary
contexts and concerns.
Dialogue, 17(4), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.176-189.
2018 Shaban, Abdul
Muslim girls in Urdu medium schools of Maharashtra:
progress, retention and aspirations (Notes).
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(25), 2016(18 Jun):
p.65-70.
2019 Valdez, Ines
Nondomination or practices of freedom? French Muslim
women, Foucault, and the full veil ban.
American Political Science Review, 110(1), 2016(Feb):
p.18-30.
NAOROJI, DADABHAI
2020 Vijay Kumar
Naoroji: the patron of economic and political nationalism
in India.
Dialogue, 17(4), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.66-71.
NATIONAL INCOME
2021 Capelli, Clara and Vaggi, Gianni
Why gross national disposable income should replace gross
national income.
Development and Change, 47(2), 2016(Mar): p.223-239.
NATIONALITY
2022 Roy, Anupama
Ambivalence of citizenship in Assam.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(26-27), 2016(25 Jun):
p.45-51.
NEHRU, JAWAHARLAL
2023 Arun Kumar
Nehru legacy in the present juncture: assessing economic
successes and failures.
Mainstream, 52(23), 2014(31 May): p.19-21.
2024 Dar, Mohd Yousuf
Jawaharlal Nehru as a Kashmiri .
Mainstream, 52(23), 2014(31 May): p.28-30.
2025 Malik, Dipak
Nehru and the peasantry.
Mainstream, 52(23), 2014(31 May): p.23-24.
2026 Sen, Nirupam
Nehru vision, its development and dismantling .
Mainstream, 52(23), 2014(31 May): p.25-27.
NETWORK ANALYSIS
2027 Cristofoli, Daniela and Markovic, Josip
How to make public networks really work: a qualitative
comparative analysis.
Public Administration, 94(1), 2016: p.89-110.
NONALIGNED COUNTRIES
2028 Mathur, Pawan
The non-aligned movement and the United Nations: reform
of the United Nations Security Council.
World Affairs, 20(2), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.10-22.
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
2029 Awasthy, Richa and Sharma, Nihar
Understanding the growth needs and challenges of non-
governmental organizations.
Indian Journal of Social Work, 77(1), 2016(Jan): p.67-90.
2030 Mercelis, Fleur , Wellens, Lore and Jegers, Marc
Beneficiary participation in non-governmental development
organisations: a case study in Vietnam.
Journal of Development Studies, 52(10), 2016(Oct):
p.1446-1462.
Beneficiary participation in development projects has
been an important topic of debate during the last
decades. In the empirical research on the matter
beneficiaries themselves are seldom, if ever, asked about
their perceptions of participatory mechanisms in place.
We present such a (case) study on the Vietnamese local
office of a European non-governmental development
organisation, also probing into other stakeholders
perceptions (46 interviews in total). Our observations
allow us to refine some aspects of the extant theoretical
insights on beneficiary participation and representation,
as well as to formulate some recommendations for
organisations aiming at increasing beneficiary
participation in their decision-making. - Reproduced.
2031 Schwartz, Eric
Humanitarian NGOs as instruments, partners, advocates and
critics in the governance of international humanitarian
response: complementary or conflicting roles?
Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration, 38(1),
2016(Mar): p.43-59.
Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) play an important
role in the governance of international humanitarian
response as implementing partners to governments and
international organisations, as advocates, and as
critics. They face challenges in reconciling their role
as implementing partner with their responsibility to
promote principles of international humanitarianism, such
as humanity, impartiality, neutrality and independence.
But this tension can be managed to ensure effective
assistance to those in need. Governments and
international organisations should welcome the role of
NGOs in the governance of humanitarian response, given
the expertise and resources that NGOs provide. To improve
integration of effort and overall effectiveness,
governments and NGOs should work to establish greater
communication and enhanced procedures for coordination,
especially given the increased engagement by non-
traditional donor governments in the provision of
humanitarian aid. - Reproduced.
2032 Stroup, Sarah S. and Wong, Wendy H.
The agency and authority of international NGOs.
Perspectives on Politics, 14(1), 2016(Mar): p.138-144.
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
2033 Malik, Priyanjali
Responding to Pakistan's tactical nuclear weapons.
USI Journal, 145(604), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.150-159.
2034 Sahni, Arun Kumar
Development of tactical nuclear weapons by Pakistan and
implications for India.
USI Journal, 145(604), 2016(Apr-Jun): p.135-149.
NUPTIALITY
2035 Mukherjee, Aparna et al
How often and early Indians mary? an exploration into the
marriage rates in India.
Demography India, 43(1-2), 2014(Jan-Dec): p.95-113.
NUTRITION
2036 Gowari, V., Rastogi, Saumya and Dwivedi, L.K.
Nutritional status of children under five years in
Maharashtra, India: evidence from a large scale cross-
sectional study.
Indian Journal of Social Work, 76(2), 2015(Apr):
p.245-260.
2037 Singh, S.K.
Nutrition and health among children in India: evidence
from NFHS-4.
Demography India, 43(1-2), 2014(Jan-Dec): p.41-52.
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES
2038 Kar, Sasmita
Resolution of academic stress by mind-fullness meditation.
Man in India, 96(4), 2016(Oct-Dec): p.1067-1073.
OLD AGE
2039 Arokiasamy, P.
Biological markers and the health of older Indians:
results from the 2010 LASI pilot.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(1), 2016(2 Jan):
p.47-58.
ONLINE EDUCATION
2040 Dange, Jagannath K. and Somashekhara M.
Massive open online courses: a new form of learning.
University News, 54(22), 2016(30 May): p.26-33.
ORGANIZATIONS
2041 Dey, Pascal and Teasdale, Simon
The tactical mimicry of social enterprise strategies:
acting 'as if' in the everyday life of third sector
organizations.
Organization, 23(4), 2016(Jul): p.485-504.
2042 Munro, Iain
Organizational resistance as a vector of
deterritorialization: the case of Wikileaks and secrecy
havens.
Organization, 23(4), 2016(Jul): p.567-587.
PANCHAYAT
2043 Singh, Inderjit
Haryana panchayati Raj: excluding the deprived.
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(16), 2016(16 Apr):
p.19-20.
2044 Wani, Gull and Yasmin, Effat
Democratic decentralisation in J&K: gender and political
change.
Mainstream, 54(1), 2015(26 Dec): p.59-67.
PATENTS
2045 Swamy, Raju Narayana
A bird's eye view of the framework of compulsory
licensing and its importance from the public health point
of view.
Ashwattha, 9(1), 2015(Jan-Mar): p.2-8.
PEASANTRY
2046 Rakesh, Kumar
Indian peasants and the land revenue policy of the
British.
University Research Journal: Social Sciences, Humanities
and Commerce, 1(1), 2016(Jan-Jun): p.57-64.
PENSIONS
2047 Olivera, Javier
Welfare, inequality and financial effects of a multi-
pillar pension reform: the case of Peru :
Journal of Development Studies, 52(10), 2016(Oct):
p.1401-1414.
This paper studies the potential effects of a multi-
pillar pension system on pension inequality, actuarial
liability and welfare in Peru, by means of simulations of
future distributions of pensions with social security
administrative records. The results show that actual
pension inequality and actuarial liability can be
substantially reduced with welfare preserving policies.
The simulations illustrate that when welfare is
considered, it is important to define the implied value
judgments, which are not universally agreed upon.
Therefore, this paper highlights the trade-offs of a
pension policy reform and contributes to assess the
second generation of pension reforms in Latin America. -
Reproduced.
PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL
2048 Ma, Liang
Performance feedback, government goal-setting and
aspiration level adaptation: evidence from Chinese
provinces.
Public Administration, 94(2), 2016(Jun): p.452-471.
Organizational goals shape performance feedback and have
salient influences on strategic behaviours and outcomes.
I develop a model of goal-setting by combining
performance gap and bureaucratic control theories. I
predict that governments set goal levels historically in
line with their past goal levels and attainment
discrepancies, horizontally targeting the comparable
peers' goal levels and performance gaps, and vertically
aligning with the upper-tier authorities' mandates. Using
the data on annual economic growth of 31 Chinese
provinces from 2000 to 2012, the within-between random-
effects model substantially supports these hypotheses. -
Reproduced.
2049 Patrucco, Andrea Stefano, Luzzini, Davide and Ronchi,
Stefano
Evaluating the effectiveness of public procurement
performance management system in local governments.
Local Government Studies, 42(5), 2016(Oct): p.739-761.
PIRACY
2050 Gilmer, Brittany
Awareness campaigns as a response to piracy off the coast
of Somalia.
Journal of Development Studies, 52(6), 2016(Jun):
p.765-779.
PLATO
2051 Emison, Gerald Andrews
Plato's sunlight: duty and expertise in today's public
service.
Public Administration Review, 76(3), 2016(May-Jun):
p.391-392.
PLURALISM
2052 Reyntjens, Filip
Legal pluralism and hybrid governance: bridging two
research lines.
Development and Change, 47(2), 2016(Mar): p.346-366.
POLICE
2053 Alok Prasanna Kumar
Who will bell the cop: police reforms and law enforcement
Economic and Political Weekly, 51(16), 2016(16 Apr):
p.10-11.
2054 Bain, Andy et al
Calling the police: the use of non-emergency 0 in England
and Wales.
Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles, 89(1),
2016(Mar): p.55-69.
2055 Chu, Chin-Chih et al
Grounding police accountability and performance in
context: a comparative study of stop and frisk between
New York city and Taipei city.
Public Administration and Development, 36(2), 2016(May):
p.108-120.
The linkage between accountability and performance is not
always positive. This study proposes that contextual
factors affect the accountability-performance link. The
central question we explore in this research is how
citizens' trust and police culture influence the link
between police accountability and performance. We
conducted in-depth interviews and compared the stop and
frisk practices in both New York City in the United
States and Taipei City in Taiwan, which are located in
different contexts. The article concludes that both
citizens' high level of trust and an open police culture
improve the performance return of accountability
pressure. - Reproduced.
2056 Collins, Paul, Marenin, Otwin and Chu, Michael Chin-Chih
The politics and management of policing reforms in newly
industrialized, industrializing and developmental states:
introduction to the special issue.
Public Administration and Development, 36(2), 2016(May):
p.71-79.
This Special Issue of Public Administration Development
on The Politics and Management of Policing Reforms in
Newly Industrialized, Industrializing and Developmental
States was undertaken in co-operation and with the
support of the Central Police University in Taiwan by the
Guest Editorial team of Paul Collins, Otwin Marenin and
Michael Chin-Chih Chu. In this Introduction, we first of
all deal with the context in which policing reforms may
arise the different types of policing, how reforms arise
from multiple domestic and international sources and the
differences in the level and degree of reforms. Next, we
outline the Special Issue (SI) approach and focus, which
is to build on what is already known and the lessons of
past efforts seeking to establish and sustain more
professional and democratic policing. The essence of the
conceptual approach is that reforming policing systems is
fundamentally a political process. We need to focus on
specific policies, practices and behaviour and shifting
the balance of policing toward more professional
behaviour. A key element that follows from this balancing
is then the possibilities of reforms taking hold in the
long run and becoming sustained. Within this framework,
the essays then summarized cover a wide variety of topics
and geographical areas - Africa, Asia, Europe and
Americas - countries on the way toward economic and
political modernisation with a variety of backgrounds in
authoritarianism. A number of emerging patterns and cross
cutting issues emerge. The final section addresses needs
for future research. The unaddressed or partially
addressed aspects across all the essays suggest several
matter, including the character of policing systems,
police decision making at managerial and individual
levels, how to assess police work and civilianization of
police work, informal policing systems and the impact of
security policies on policing - militarization and
secrecy. - Reproduced.
2057 Elliot-Davies, M., et al
Getting a battering: the perceived impact of demand and
capacity imbalance within the police service of England
and Wales: a qualitative review.
Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles, 89(2),
2016(Jun): p.93-116.
2058 Faull, Andrew
Measured governance? policing and performance management
in South Africa.
Public Administration and Development, 36(2), 2016(May):
p.157-168.
The nineties were a period of mass reforms in South
African policing. Within a few years of its transition
from apartheid to democracy, the South African Police
Service (SAPS) had developed a performance measurement
tool based on the New York CompStat system. Such tools
have been praised for their apparent effectiveness in
reducing crime but scorned for the pressures they place
on police officers. This article demonstrates that the
SAPS' Performance Chart has framed the police as crime
fighters, giving little to no regard for community
relations or police legitimacy. While organisational
rhetoric emphasises police-community relations and police
professionalism, these are absent from the targets by
which police are assessed. The unintended consequences
were clearly demonstrated when angry residents of
Khayelitsha in Cape Town successfully lobbied for a
Commission of Inquiry into the failures of policing in
2012. The scandal showed that despite good intentions,
the introduction of the Chart has not produced effective,
democratic policing. On the contrary, the resulting
pressure to 'perform' can and has promoted police
practices that erode community trust in and cooperation
with police. For the SAPS, this is particularly true in
the absence of a measure of public confidence or of
feelings of safety. - Reproduced.
2059 Gonzalez, Yanilda
Varieties of participatory security: assessing community
participation in policing in Latin America.
Public Administration and Development, 36(2), 2016(May):
p.132-143.
The language of community and societal participation in
the context of crime prevention has become ubiquitous
throughout Latin America, as governments increasingly
turn to police-community partnerships as a means of
addressing the seemingly intractable problems of rising
crime and insecurity. But to what extent has such
participatory security had any influence on the capacity
of the state to provide security? I argue that in order
to understand whether and how these participatory
instruments shape what police actually do, we must look
to variation in institutional design and how community
participation operates in practice. I develop a typology
of participatory security that considers how different
institutional features may differentially affect police
and other state agencies by alternatively serving as
channels for the flow of information and oversight
mechanisms or simply as a tool for improving the police's
image. Drawing on evidence from participatory security
institutions in Argentina, Brazil, and Colombia, I
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