Understanding Street-Level Bureaucrats' Decision Making: Determining Eligibility in the Social Security Disability Program

Personal interactions between clients and street-level bureaucrats are significant in explaining why street-level bureaucrats behave as they do. Not all bureaucracies that apply program rules to individual however, engage faceto-face with their clientele. As more intake procedures are automated, suc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public administration review 2010-03, Vol.70 (2), p.247-257
1. Verfasser: Keiser, Lael R.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Personal interactions between clients and street-level bureaucrats are significant in explaining why street-level bureaucrats behave as they do. Not all bureaucracies that apply program rules to individual however, engage faceto-face with their clientele. As more intake procedures are automated, such "one-on-one" encounters decrease. The author generates and tests hypotheses about frontline bureaucratic decision making in the Social Security Disability program, by applying bounded rationality theory. The findings show that eligibility decisions by street-level bureaucrats are affected by their adherence to subsets of agency goals and perceptions of others in the governance system. How quickly they make decisions aho has an impact. There is no evidence that the way in which bureaucrats evaluate clients exphins their decisions when they lack face-to-face contact.
ISSN:0033-3352
1540-6210
DOI:10.1111/j.1540-6210.2010.02131.x