The traditional authority of mayors and aldermen is readily challenged. Formal positions do no longer constitute authority. For that reason, new political repertoires are being sought after and are being developed by local political-executive leaders. This article analyses and compares the sources of authority for mayors and aldermen: how can they develop, maintain, and strengthen their authority? It develops an innovative typology of sources of authority. A distinction is made between institutional, positional, and personal sources of authority. The model is applied to the mayors and aldermen in relation to relevant socio-political developments that affect the two offices. It is found that the authority of mayors rests on institutional sources of authority more so than that of aldermen. For the latter, positional and personal sources of authority are more important. At the same time, personal sources of authority have become very important for mayors as well as aldermen. The results call upon mayors and aldermen’s skills and competences to develop personal authority through persuasion. |
Artikel |
Veranderend lokaal gezagDe gezagsbronnen van burgemeesters en wethouders verkend |
Tijdschrift | Beleid en Maatschappij, Aflevering 4 2013 |
Trefwoorden | authority, political leadership, mayors, aldermen |
Auteurs | Dr. Niels Karsten MSc MA en Drs. Thijs Jansen |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Artikel |
Hoe beoordelen topambtenaren veranderingen?De bijzondere positie van de Nederlandse topambtenaar |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 4 2013 |
Trefwoorden | senior officials, reforms, public sector, international comparison |
Auteurs | Steven Van de Walle, Stephan Dorsman en Tamara Homan |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article shows how top officials in ten European countries evaluate changes in the public sector based on a number of dimensions, such as quality, cost-efficiency, ethics, effectiveness and the attractiveness of the public sector as an employer. Senior public officials in the Netherlands are compared to their counterparts from 9 other European countries. The study is based on the large-scale academic COCOPS Top Executive Survey, and answers from 3,173 top public sector officials were used. |
Artikel |
Governance by numbers: risico’s verbonden aan de internationale benchmarking en ranking van pensioensystemen |
Tijdschrift | Beleid en Maatschappij, Aflevering 2 2013 |
Trefwoorden | Governance by numbers, Commensuratie, comparatief onderzoek, doelmatigheid van pensioenen, standaardisatie |
Auteurs | Drs. Hans Peeters en Dr. Gert Verschraegen |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article points out some of the pitfalls and ambiguities involved in quantified cross-national policy comparisons by looking at the construction and use of standardized indicators in the field of pension policy. The empirical analysis looks at three cases where the OESO and EU use standardized pension indicators to score and rank the performance of national pension systems. The cases illustrate some of the problems associated with scoring and ranking the outcomes of unique and complex pension systems by means of internationally standardized indicators. Our results show that internationally standardised indicators for pension systems are not neutral in the sense that they favor countries with certain institutional pension policy mixes over others. When particular institutional characteristics are treated differently under the same metric, systematically distorted conclusions about the performance of national pension systems may, and likely do, result. Consequently, these observed biases hinder reliable cross-national comparison that is based on these indicators. The article concludes with some recommendations on the construction and use of international indicators in the field of pension policy. It also discusses where research on the process of commensuration – transforming qualities into quantities − in a comparative context should go from here. |
Artikel |
Het eindeloze verhaal van de bestuurskunde: complexiteit, vernieuwing en de Big Society |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 1 2013 |
Trefwoorden | Big Society, public administration, complexity, innovation, administrative history |
Auteurs | Thomas Schillemans |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
‘Big Society’ has been one of those inspirational concepts that have recently swept through the public administration literature. With their appeal for a ‘Big Society’, the British Tories contrasted their policy program with Labours’ traditional ‘Big Government’ program. Upon closer inspection, however, it is revealed that the underlying analysis is not new at all, but reflects a specific analysis that can be traced back to Wilson’s famous essay on the study of public administration in 1887. Stripped from its details, the never-ending story claims that public administration now struggles with overwhelming complexity, which makes traditional bureaucratic methods obsolete and calls for innovative, new approaches. The fact that this story has remained fairly constant for over 125 years is cause for some concern. The article traces the historical genesis of this never-ending story and lands on a plea for more sophisticated attention for administrative history, more critical scrutiny of new ideas and more serious study of the nature and effects of complexity. |