STATE AGENCIES AND THEIR ENVIRONMENTS - EXAMINING THE INFLUENCE OF IMPORTANT EXTERNAL ACTORS
- 31 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The Journal of Politics
- Vol. 49 (1) , 186-206
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2131140
Abstract
Research on the federal bureaucracy has long recognized the importance of organization environment for differentiating among agencies and affecting their political support as well as policy outputs. Although the environment has been considered an element in the behavior of state agencies as well, research at this level has been less sensitive to important differences across agency environments. This article identifies four major actors in the policy environment of state agencies--the governor, legislature, clientele groups, and professional associations--and based on a 1978 survey of state administrators, evaluates empirically the influence of these sources over a sample of agencies encompassing all 50 states. Data analysis shows that in addition to agency type, several factors are systematically associated with differences in the nature of the environment confronted, including agency structural characteristics, funding provisions, exogenous shocks to normal operations and state political environment. Just as at the federal level, then, this research suggests that at the state level, bureaucracy more closely resembles a collection of heterogeneous agencies than a monolithic institution.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- State Aid to Cities: A Causal InquiryPublished by Test accounts ,1984
- GUBERNATORIAL INFLUENCE AND STATE BUREAUCRACYAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1983
- The Governor as Chief AdministratorPublic Administration Review, 1983
- Measuring Gubernatorial PowerThe Journal of Politics, 1979
- The Political Economy of Public OrganizationsPublic Administration Review, 1973
- Characteristics of Organizational Environments and Perceived Environmental UncertaintyAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1972
- Four Systems of Policy, Politics, and ChoicePublic Administration Review, 1972
- Organizational Structure, Environment and Performance: The Role of Strategic ChoiceSociology, 1972
- Power-Dependence RelationsAmerican Sociological Review, 1962
- Power and AdministrationPublic Administration Review, 1949