Wagenaar2004
Wagenaar2004 | |
---|---|
BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Wagenaar2004 |
Author(s) | Hendrik Wagenaar |
Title | “Knowing” the rules: administrative work as practice |
Editor(s) | |
Tag(s) | EMCA, workplace studies, administrative work |
Publisher | |
Year | 2004 |
Language | |
City | |
Month | |
Journal | Public Administration Review |
Volume | 64 |
Number | 6 |
Pages | 643–656 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1111/j.1540-6210.2004.00412.x |
ISBN | |
Organization | |
Institution | |
School | |
Type | |
Edition | |
Series | |
Howpublished | |
Book title | |
Chapter |
Abstract
This article presents a theory of administrative work as practice. Building on a rich narrative of a mid-level administrator in the Dutch Immigration Office, four core elements of administrative practice are identified: contextuality, acting, knowing, and interacting. Taking cues from practice theory and ethnomethodology, the author argues that the visible aspects of administrative work (decisions, reports, negotiations, standard operating procedures, and—on a higher level of institutional abstraction—structures, legal rules, lines of authority, and accountability) are effectuations, enactments of the hidden, taken-for-granted routines: the almost unthinking actions, tacit knowledge, fleeting interactions, practical judgments, self-evident understandings and background knowledge, shared meanings, and personal feelings that constitute the core of administrative work. Taken together, contextuality, acting, knowing, and interacting make up a unified account of practical judgment in an administrative environment that is characterized by complexity, indeterminacy, and the necessity to act on the situation at hand.
Notes