Predicting Public Sector Accountability: From Agency Drift to Forum Drift
Author(s) -
Thomas Schillemans,
Madalina Busuioc
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of public administration research and theory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.154
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1477-9803
pISSN - 1053-1858
DOI - 10.1093/jopart/muu024
Subject(s) - accountability , principal–agent problem , agency (philosophy) , terminology , principal (computer security) , public sector , odds , political science , empirical research , public relations , public administration , sociology , business , epistemology , law , computer science , corporate governance , finance , computer security , logistic regression , social science , linguistics , philosophy , machine learning
PublishedArticlePrincipal-agent theory has been the dominant theory at the heart of public sector accountability research. The notion of the potentially drifting agent—such as independent public agencies, opaque transnational institutions, or recalcitrant street-level bureaucrats—has been the guiding paradigm in empirical accountability research. The aim of this article is first of all to signal the limits of principal-agent theory as a predictive model of how accountability evolves. A string of findings in accountability research shows that we are in practice often not dealing with the envisaged problem of drifting agents (or actors in accountability terminology). Unexpectedly, we encounter recurring reports of drifting principals, or more accurately forums, which mysteriously choose not to hold their agents accountable. The article puts forward possible reasons for the observed discrepancies encountered in public accountability research, by identifying why such situations are at odds with the model’s assumptions, as well as theoretical suggestions on fruitful ways to go forward. In the end, this study seeks to provide building blocks for theories of public sector accountability with an improved predictive capacity. This is done by connecting descriptive studies of the multifaceted character of accountability to “classical” principal-agent theory concerns about agency and control
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