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Public Administration Reform over Time : Did Change Lead to a More Effective Integrity Management?

Demmke, Christoph (2020-11-30)

 
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https://doi.org/10.17573/cepar.2020.2.01

Demmke, Christoph
Faculty of Public Administration, University of Ljubljana
30.11.2020
doi:10.17573/cepar.2020.2.01
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2020120399289

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vertaisarvioitu
©2020 CEPAR & Author(s). Articles are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic International Public License. Under this license, authors retain ownership of the copyright for their content, but allow anyone to download, reuse, reprint, modify, distribute and/or copy the content as long as the original authors and source are cited.
Tiivistelmä
The following discussion adds to the discourse regarding the relationship between public administration reform and ethics policies. In this theoreti­cal paper, a narrative is employed that re-reads the old Weberian model as a model of ‘institutional integrity’, which is slowly replaced by a public management concept that focuses on individual integrity. Whereas the Weberian concept defined institutional integrity as a quality of institu­tions, more recent management concepts define institutional integrity as a quality of public officers within institutions. This also explains why the current focus of attention is ever more on individuals (as the main cause for unethical conduct) and the bad-person model of integrity. An alterna­tive framing of this paper is about ‘institutional ethics’ over time. During the last decades, we are moving from an institutional, but mechanical and rigid Weberian model, to an individual, but more fluid New Public Management model. We are moving towards a version of institutional in­tegrity that tries to use new behavioural mechanism to get back to some Weberian virtues, without its structures and technical focus. This novel ‘integrity management’ movement is really all about filling the gaps left by New Public Management doctrines. However, the reform of integrity management also develops into a specialised, sophisticated and profes­sionalised ethics bureaucracy. Trends are towards ever more broader and stricter integrity requirements. Still, ethics policies are ineffective and shortcomings in implementing integrity policies are neglected.
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