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" The Endurance of the Pre-Bureaucratic and eGovernment Hybridity at the Street-Level: An Ethnographic Study "
Alshallaqi, Mohammad
Hayes, Niall
Document Type
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Latin Dissertation
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Language of Document
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English
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Record Number
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1056177
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Doc. No
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TL55294
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Main Entry
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Alshallaqi, Mohammad
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Title & Author
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The Endurance of the Pre-Bureaucratic and eGovernment Hybridity at the Street-Level: An Ethnographic Study\ Alshallaqi, MohammadHayes, Niall
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College
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Lancaster University (United Kingdom)
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Date
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2019
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Degree
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Ph.D.
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student score
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2019
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Note
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360 p.
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Abstract
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How is a post-bureaucratic reform under the rubric of eGovernment enacted at the street-level in a Middle Eastern, specifically, Saudi Arabian context? And ‘what insights can be gained from describing this enactment to advance debates on bureaucracy versus post-bureaucracy as well as debates on street-level bureaucracy?’ These questions underpin the focus of this ethnographic study. The conventional wisdom in the debate on bureaucracy versus post-bureaucracy is that the outcomes of post-bureaucratic reforms indicate hybridisation of bureaucratic and post-bureaucratic characteristics. In this thesis, I argue that this debate is limited by its overlook of the ‘pre-bureaucratic’ (Weber, 1978). The pre-bureaucratic manifests clearly at the street-level (Lipsky, 1983), where it has been argued that street-level bureaucrats exercise discretion in ways that deviate from the formal bureaucratic rationality toward the pre-bureaucratic. In the Middle East, the pre-bureaucratic at the street-level is intermeshed with local cultural practices that suffuse everyday work in bureaucratic organisations. Public sector post-bureaucratic reforms in the guise of eGovernment were poised to overcome not only bureaucratic inertia but also pre-bureaucratic practices in this context. The findings of this thesis demonstrate that eGovernment at the street-level is enacted through a negotiated order (Strauss, 1978) that indicates hybridisation of the pre-bureaucratic, the bureaucratic, and the post-bureaucratic. The emerging pattern is characterised, drawing on Gouldner (1954), as a ‘mock post-bureaucracy’ pattern. The theoretical contributions of the thesis are discussed in relation to the debates on bureaucracy versus post-bureaucracy and street-level bureaucracy. The thesis also extends empirical and methodological contributions.
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Descriptor
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Information science
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Middle Eastern studies
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Political science
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Public administration
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Added Entry
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Hayes, Niall
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Added Entry
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Lancaster University (United Kingdom)
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