Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 14th Aug 2025, 03:46:13am BST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
PSG 6 - Governance of Public Sector Organisations
Time:
Friday, 29/Aug/2025:
11:00am - 12:00pm

Session Chair: Prof. Muiris MAC CARTHAIGH, Queens University Belfast

"Organizational change and leadership"


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Presentations

Agencification in Japan’s National Museums: Organisational Change and Sectoral distinction

Sieun PARK, Hiroko KUDO

Chuo university, Japan

In the late 1990s, Japan introduced the Administration Reforms to address economic depression and administrative inefficiencies, based on the New Public Management (NPM), aiming for efficient, accountable, and performance-oriented public service delivery. As part of this, various public organisations have undertaken agencification. However, the impact and process of agencification differ across sectors, with variations observed in areas such as management practices and operational autonomy (Verhoest et al., 2021).

Extensive research has attempted to clarify the impact of agencification in the management of various sectors, such as universities, libraries, and hospitals. Nonetheless, research about cultural organisations is relatively underdeveloped (Palumbo et al., 2022). Thus, this paper explores the institutional logic of the museum sector within the broader context of public sector reform, focusing on agencification. It argues what distinguishes the museum from other public organisations in terms of reform drivers and embedded organisational ideas through the lens of publicness and organisational logic.

Japan implemented agencification for ‘streamlining the government’ (Yamamoto, 2003, p.17) and efficient public service delivery. One example is the creation of Independent Administrative Institutions (IAIs) to oversee national museums in 2001, which makes national museums under the National Institute for Cultural Heritage or National Museum of Art, as IAIs. Another example is the National University Corporation, designed specifically for national universities in 2004. While it was enacted in a similar timeframe, it progressed differently with a distinct scope.

The reform towards the national museums is incremental, even though they underwent structural change. The core functions, such as research and preservation, are under the government's oversight while the operational parts are outsourced (e.g., ticket sales and holding events). Furthermore, the collections in national museums are overseen by the government, which limits museums’ autonomy. However, all 86 national universities transformed into National University Corporations, with immediate pressure from the government, such as budget cuts, introducing performance evaluation, and privatising their services.

Likewise, the scope of the reforms differs between the national universities and museums. What distinguishes the museum sector from national universities? How has the agencification unfolded within the museum sector, and how is institutional logic embodied in this sector to shape its changes?

This research methodology involves a one-country case study, Japan, to identify how the university and museum sectors have been transformed and undertaken differently. The paper analyses 1) policy documents concerning agencification, 2) reform plans carried out by institutions, and 3) long and short-term institutional visions and plans.

Reference

Palumbo, R., Manna, R., & Cavallone, M. (2022). The managerialisation of museums and art institutions: Perspectives from an empirical analysis. International Journal of Organizational Analysis, 30(6), 1397–1418.

Verhoest, K., van Thiel, S., & De Vadder, S. (2021). Agencification in public administration. In Oxford research encyclopedia of politics. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.1466

Yamamoto, H. (2000). New Public Management – Japan’s Practice (NIRA Policy Paper No. 293). National Institute for Research Advancement. https://npi.or.jp/en/research/data/bp293e.pdf



Bureaucratic Leadership Turn-over in Public Sector Organizations: Trends and Challenges

Abiha ZAHRA

Information Technology University, Pakistan

Purpose

Countries going through political turmoil can still find stability in governance and public service if the institutions and those running them are independent of political influence and are of high quality (Rasool, 2023). Given the complexities of modern governance and the need for responsiveness, a well-coordinated and stable civil service is imperative. It becomes even more significant for public organizations that seek to deliver state-provided services to citizens effectively. However, with partisan shifts in government, policy objectives and priorities change, causing turn-over of bureaucrats in the offices (Dahlstrom & Holmgren, 2017).

This paper aims to theorize the principal-agent relation (politics-administration) in the context of public administration in Pakistan by mapping and comprehensively analyzing the patterns of bureaucratic turnover in public organizations in Pakistan. (Q1: How have these patterns of turnover evolved in recent years with changing public sector landscape? (Q2: What has been the impact of task and policy field of public sector organizations on the intensity of bureaucratic turnover?)

Design/methodology

This research paper analyses a novel data set tracing the careers of 500 bureaucratic leaders working in 38 public sector organizations working across 17 policy fields between 1990s and 2024 in Pakistan. The data on the legally defined term in the office and the actual term of the leaders will enable mapping of the turnover trends and political patronage practices in the country across different types of organizations. Term in office (timing in months) is the key variable to assess patronage in this case since, patronage is practiced in different forms and controlling bureaucrats’ terms in the office is a significant way.

Mapping of the bureaucratic leader careers involved extensive data collection from multiple sources as no such data is documented or maintained in the case of Pakistan. The data sources included organization websites, their annual reports, federal government (Establishment Division) promotion, and placement notifications, newspaper articles, LinkedIn profiles of the officeholders, phone calls, and visits to the organizations.

The inclusion criteria for the organizations was aligned with thirteen policy areas that will help rationalize our objectives into a workable, generalizable theory by providing a clear picture of appointments and turnover practices in Pakistan in specific policy areas. All these organizations are working under a federal ministry. The legal status of the selected organizations varied along the Van Thiel (2012) categories from type 0 & 1 to type 2 & 3.