dc.contributor.advisor | Dr. Guillermo Miguel Cejudo Ramírez |
dc.creator | Campos González, Sergio Alonso |
dc.date.issued | 2021 |
dc.identifier | 172975.pdf |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/11651/5346 |
dc.description.abstract | It is now well-accepted that street-level bureaucrats (SLBs) play a key role as the face of government for the public and that their implementation actions exert immediate, major implications for citizens-clients. An extensive scholarly attention has been devoted to the ways through which SLBs exercise their discretion during direct delivery interactions . However, citizens are traditionally referred to as subjective to the actions of SLBs and referred to as the powerless side of the interaction. To allow a broader perspective on the role citizens play in their encounters with government, this dissertation focuses on citizen agency during street-level implementation and public service delivery. The main research question this thesis tries to answer is: how citizen agency during street-level implementation and public service delivery can be conceptualized, how does policy structure enable it, and what are its effects? To answer this question, I use three papers: one theoretical and two empirical. In the first paper I conduct a systematic literature review to know how literature has studied and defined citizen agency. In the second and third paper I explore the role of policy structure as an enabler of citizen agency, and particularly, the role of interactional structure. I use the empirical case study of Prospera, a conditional cash transfer in Mexico. The second paper contributes to answering my research question by focusing specifically on how the policy structure helps to develop citizen agency. This study fills a gap in the literature because it explains how policy structure contributes to citizen agency beyond individual factors like traditionally has been the case. In the third paper, I focus on repeated interactions between citizens and street-level bureaucrats as a source of citizen agency. Whit this study, I contribute to the literature in two ways: first, by providing a distinction between one-shot and repeated interactions, which the literature has avoided, and stating the possible consequences not only for the interaction but for street-level work in general. Second, by exploring how repeated interactions have implications for the way citizens behave during policy implementation and public service delivery. |
dc.format | application/PDF |
dc.language.iso | eng |
dc.publisher | El Autor |
dc.rights | Con fundamento en los artículos 21 y 27 de la Ley Federal del Derecho de Autor y como titular de los derechos moral y patrimonial, otorgo de manera gratuita y permanente al Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, A.C. y a su Biblioteca autorización para que fije la obra en cualquier medio, incluido el electrónico, y la divulguen entre sus usuarios, profesores, estudiantes o terceras personas, sin que pueda percibir por tal divulgación una contraprestación. |
dc.subject.lcsh | Bureaucracy. |
dc.subject.lcsh | Public administration. |
dc.subject.lcsh | Civil service -- Officials and employees -- Effect of citizen ship on. |
dc.title | Merely policy clients? citizen agency during street-level policy implementation and public service delivery |
dc.type | Tesis doctoral |
dc.accessrights | Acceso abierto |
dc.recordIdentifier | 000172975 |
dc.rights.license | Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 4.0 Internacional CC BY-NC-ND |
thesis.degree.grantor | Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas |
thesis.degree.name | Doctorado en Políticas Públicas |
dc.proquest.rights | Yes |