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Åkerström, Malin and Jacobsson, Katarina and Cederholm, Erika Andersson and Wästerfors, David (2021) Hidden Attractions of Administration: The Peculiar Appeal of Meetings and Documents. 1st Edition ed. Routledge, London. ISBN 9781003108436

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003108436

Abstract

This book argues that the expansion of administrative activities in today’s working life is driven not only by pressure from above, but also from below. The authors examine the inner dynamics of people-processing organizations—those formally working for clients, patients, or students—to uncover the hidden attractions of doing administrative work, despite all the complaints and laments about "too many meetings" or "too much paperwork." There is something appealing to those compelled to participate in today’s constantly multiplying and expanding administration that defies popular framings of it as merely pressure from above. Hidden Attractions of Administration shows in detail the emotional attractiveness, moral conflicts, and almost magical features that administrative tasks often entail in today’s organizations, supported by ethnographic studies consisting of over 200 qualitative interviews and participant observations from ten organizational settings and contexts across Sweden. The authors also question and complement explanations in administration-related research that have previously been taken for granted, arguing that it is a simplification to attribute all aspects of the change to New Public Management and instead taking into account what the classic sociologist Georg Simmel called an Eigendynamik: a self-reinforcing tendency that, under certain circumstances, needs only a nudge in an administrative direction to get going. By applying ethnography to issues of bureaucratization and meeting cultures and by drawing on findings in emotional sociology and social anthropology, this volume contributes to both the sociology of work and the study of human service organizations and will appeal to scholars and students working across both areas.

Item Type: Book
Subjects: H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General)
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email lib@uiii.ac.id
Date Deposited: 10 Nov 2021 03:31
Last Modified: 10 Nov 2021 03:31
URI: http://digitalcollections.uiii.ac.id/id/eprint/179

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