Interactive Policy Processes: A Challenge for Street- Level Bureaucrats

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58235/sjpa.v22i3.11410

Keywords:

Street-level bureaucrats, Skills, Capacities, Participatory arenas, Conflicts

Abstract

Street-level bureaucrats (SLB) play a crucial role in ensuring better policy implementa- tion and generating trust between the system and citizens, according to the literature. In this article, we argue that Lipsky’s distinction between public managers and SLB needs an update. Today, public managers are increasingly expected to work closely and directly with affected stakeholders in order to solve cross-cutting ‘wicked problems’. Interactive and participative collaborative policy processes require public managers to move from back-office work to front-office work, in effect converting public managers into SLB. The key question raised is, thus: what kind of skills and capabilities do SLB need to engage in today’s more interactive forms of public policy-making? And what are the implications for how universities educate these groups?’ Drawing on a study of 32 urban professionals who work on the frontline in deprived neighbourhoods, we scrutinise the challenges and dilemmas that professionals face in their work with interactive processes. By distinguishing between ‘academic specialists’ and ‘academic generalists’, we are able to pinpoint and differentiate between skills needed for each of these groups in order to secure transparent processes that abide by the rule of law and support well-functioning local communities and, more broadly, the skills needed to secure democracy and econom- ic efficiency.

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Author Biographies

Annika Agger, Department of Social Sciences and Business, Roskilde University

Annika Agger, PhD, is associate professor in public administration at the Department of Social Sciences and Business, Roskilde University. Her research field is urban governance and how public authorities can enable inclusive and democratic polices that creates public value. She has written articles and contributions to books on how to create institutional settings for public deliberations and on how urban practitioners working in the interface between public institutions and civil society can contribute to make positive changes.

Bodil Damgaard, Department of Social Sciences and Business, Roskilde University

Bodil Damgaard is associate professor at Roskilde University, Denmark. Her research concerns the involvement of societal actors in addressing public policy issues and the conditions under which the collab- oration between the state (at various levels) and the societal actors takes place. Governance, collaborative governance and multilevel governance are key words for much of her research. In recent years, university administrative positions have given rise to an interest into which competencies and transferrable skills new forms of governance require of future public and private sector administrators and subsequently, how to incorporate the training of such skills into university programmes within the social sciences.

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Published

2018-09-15

How to Cite

Agger, A., & Damgaard, B. (2018). Interactive Policy Processes: A Challenge for Street- Level Bureaucrats. Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration, 22(3), 89–108. https://doi.org/10.58235/sjpa.v22i3.11410

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