Incheon National University Researcher Examines Proactive Change-Oriented Behaviors by Public Service Providers
Change-oriented organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) refers to voluntary actions that employees take to improve work processes in their organization. While providing job autonomy has long been the favored means by which to induce change, a new study shows that, in risk averse environments such as public service organizations, a sophisticated process is necessary to produce change-oriented behavior, wherein job autonomy is coupled with low job ambiguity and high levels of procedural justice.
Title: Examining organizational citizenship behavior in public organizations
Caption: The study shows that job autonomy must be coupled with low job ambiguity and high procedural justice for organizational citizenship behavior to be seen within a public administrative organization.
Credit: WIPO | OMPI from Openverse https://openverse.org/image/38017d12-6ffd-44a1-9c95-fefea10ce701
License type: CC BY 2.0
Although change-oriented behaviors are critical to high quality public service delivery, encouraging employees to embrace and pursue change in the public sector is difficult. Even with sufficient job autonomy–the principal antidote to resistance to change in the public sector literature–public servants may still lack the incentives, skills, information, and sense of security necessary to engage in proactive change-oriented behavior. Consequently, while job autonomy is undoubtedly important, it alone is not enough, as demonstrated by the many cases in which autonomy fails to lead to change and work process improvements. Given the importance of attitudes about change for public service quality, an important question arises: Under what conditions will job autonomy induce change-oriented behavior in the public sector?
Aiming to understand the role played by job autonomy in producing change in public sector organizations, Associate Professor Jesse W. Campbell from Incheon National University has recently published a paper in the journal Review of Public Personnel Administration on December 22, 2023. In this study, the researcher proposes a new theoretical model of change-oriented OCB. The model describes a sophisticated set of conditions under which job autonomy is likely to produce change-oriented behavior: autonomy drives change only in job contexts where workers are provided with rich information about job goals and processes and secondly do not fear unjust punishment by superiors if efforts at change should fail. Only in such contexts will job autonomy lead to higher levels of job mastery and a willingness to pursue change.
The researcher analyzed a large sample of publicly available Korean government employee survey data from the Korean Public Employee Perception Survey collected from August 12 to September 30, 2020. Given the subtlety and number of relationships identified in the conceptual model, Dr. Campbell used structural equation modeling with latent variable interactions terms – an advanced statistical estimation technique – to test the model empirically.
When asked about the most important finding of their study, Dr. Campbell says, “It is difficult to create and maintain a culture of change in public organizations. A key contribution of this study lies in its identification of factors over which public managers have some control. These can act as levers that managers can manipulate to encourage change-oriented behavior in their organizations. While the difficulties should not be underestimated, the factors that can drive change are nevertheless tractable and managers that genuinely want to encourage their employees to pursue change have tools available to them to facilitate this goal.”
While a certain level of job autonomy has been implicated in a variety of organizationally beneficial behaviors as well as the subjective wellbeing of public employees, autonomy should not be considered in isolation but rather as a part of the broader work context which also consists in norms, incentives, job roles, and human relationships. Consequently, simply having job autonomy is not enough for an employee to engage in change-oriented behavior. Rather, its effect is contingent upon other contextual factors that allow and encourage employees to act on their autonomy and pursue change. Only when these conditions are present will public organizations reap the performance rewards of change-oriented behavior.
To efficiently and impartially provide public services, administrators must closely adhere to established practices and rules. Perhaps the most stubborn condition preventing change in the public sector is that the public is quite intolerant of risk taking on the part of public servants. This is understandable given that it is ultimately tax dollars that are lost when change fails. “If we want change in the public sector, we need to build the cultural, procedural, and managerial foundations on which it can be pursued. Not only must employees have sufficient levels of autonomy to pursue change, but they also need sufficient information and clarity about their tasks. Change must be pursued in an environment where employees are not worried about being unjustly persecuted when attempts at change fail. A strong culture for change is thus the product of a sophisticated configuration of factors which must be implemented in tandem,” concludes Dr. Campbell.
Here’s hoping for a better understanding of change-oriented behavior in public services!
Reference
Authors: |
Jesse W. Campbell1,* |
Title of original paper: |
Job Autonomy, Role Ambiguity, and Procedural Justice: A Multi-Conditional Process Model of Change-Oriented Organizational Citizenship Behavior in Public Organizations |
Journal: |
Review of Public Personnel Administration |
DOI: |
https://doi.org/10.1177/0734371X231214978 |
Affiliations: |
1Incheon National University |
*Corresponding author’s email: jcampbell@inu.ac.kr
About Incheon National University
Incheon National University (INU) is a comprehensive, student-focused university. It was founded in 1979 and given university status in 1988. One of the largest universities in South Korea, it houses nearly 14,000 students and 500 faculty members. In 2010, INU merged with Incheon City College to expand capacity and open more curricula. With its commitment to academic excellence and an unrelenting devotion to innovative research, INU offers its students real-world internship experiences. INU not only focuses on studying and learning but also strives to provide a supportive environment for students to follow their passion, grow, and, as their slogan says, be INspired.
Website: https://www.inu.ac.kr/sites/inuengl/index.do
About the author
Jesse Campbell is an Associate Professor of Public Administration at Incheon National University in South Korea. His research explores themes in organization theory and comparative public administration, as well as topics with a specific relevance to the Korean administrative context. Enduring topics of interest include how elements of administrative culture influence organizational behavior, as well as the role of national context in shaping the initiation, configuration, and effectiveness of public sector reform. Dr. Campbell holds a PhD in Public Administration from Seoul National University in South Korea and a master's degree in philosophy from Western University in Canada. He can be reached at jcampbell@inu.ac.kr.