Contextualizing managerial work in local government organizations
Abstract
This thesis is about managerial work in local government organizations. The purpose is to explain
important aspects of managerial work with the help of a contextual perspective. The focus is on
managers at the operational level of education, health and social care services, and technical
services. Two research questions are raised. The first question considers the relationship between
context and managerial work: how does organizational context influence managerial work, and
how does managerial work influence organizational context? The second question is about
contextual variations within the municipal sector: does the organizational context for lower-level
managerial work vary between differently gendered municipal services, and, if so, how can this
variation be explained?
In order to answer these questions, I have used a cross-level and comparative research design.
The design is cross-level in the sense that I consider how factors at different analytical levels
interact. The design is comparative in the sense that the services have been strategically selected
to represent differently gendered municipal contexts.
The theoretical framework evolved mainly from management, organization, and gender theory.
With the help of Gary Johns’ (2006) framework of organizational context, I outlined a model of
how to understand the relationship between context at different levels and managerial work
practice. Other central concepts in the thesis are Yvonne Hirdman’s (1988) idea of an
omnipresent gender system and Joan Acker’s (1990) notion of gendered organizations.
The empirical work of the thesis consists of three quantitative studies (Study I, II and IV) that
are based on a two-wave survey of over 400 operations managers in five different types of
services, and one qualitative study (Study III) based on eight interviews with managers, politicians
and controllers in two different organizations. In the first study, the impact of organizational
traits on the unnecessary and unreasonable tasks in managerial work is investigated, using
multilevel regression analysis. The aim of the second study was to provide a measure that can be
used in order to evaluate and compare organizational conditions for managers in different types
of services. The third study is an investigation into how the generic traits of the New Public
Management have been implemented in differently gendered local government organizations.
Lastly, the fourth study explores variations in organizational conditions in differently gendered
services.
The first overall conclusion of the thesis is that the relationship between managerial work and
context is recursive. Organizations are arenas of conflict in which different stakeholders try to
turn their ideas into governing formalities. Managerial work practice is to a large extent governed
by the formalities that constitute the organizational context, which would in turn cease to exist if
not for the daily work practices of managers and other organizational actors. The second
conclusion is that there are systematic differences in organizational conditions between
differently gendered services, and therefore a structural approach to gender is an important
complement to more individualistic views on differences in male and female managerial
behaviour.
Parts of work
1) Björk, L., Bejerot, E., Jacobshagen, N. & Härenstam, A. (2013). I shouldn’t have to do this:Illegitimate tasks as a stressor in relation to organizational control and resource deficits.
Work & Stress, 27, 3, 262-277.
2) Björk, L., Szücs, S. & Härenstam, A. (Forthcoming). Measuring capacity to perform across local government services- managers’ perceptions. International Journal of Public Sector Management.
3) Björk, L., Forsberg Kankkunen, T. & Bejerot, E. (2011). Det kontrollerade chefskapetvariationer
i genusmärkta verksamheter. Arbetsmarknad och arbetsliv, 17, 4, 79-95.
4) Björk, L. & Härenstam, A. (2013). Conditions for managerial work in gendered organizations. Manuscript.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
Department of Sociology ; Sociologiska institutionen
Disputation
Fredagen den 13 december 2013, kl. 9.30, Torgny Segerstedt salen, Vasaparken, universitetsbyggnaden.
Date of defence
2013-12-13
lisa.bjork@socav.gu.se
Date
2013-11-21Author
Björk, Lisa
Keywords
managerial work
gender
organization
context
local government
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-981195-3-4
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Work Science
13
Language
eng