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dc.contributor.authorMyksvoll, Thomas Margel
dc.date.accessioned2022-01-05T11:52:46Z
dc.date.available2022-01-05T11:52:46Z
dc.date.issued2022-01-21
dc.date.submitted2021-12-20T09:41:11.775Z
dc.identifiercontainer/75/aa/d3/5f/75aad35f-e512-4df7-b78a-fb560128ec06
dc.identifier.isbn9788230843000
dc.identifier.isbn9788230861646
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11250/2836169
dc.description.abstractThe Norwegian 2014-2020 Local Government Reform, and the 2015-2020 Regional Government Reform reduced the number of municipalities from 428 to 356, the number of counties from 19 to 11, and transferred some political and administrative tasks from the national level to the local and regional levels. The two reforms contained both voluntary and coerced dynamics, where especially the latter was (and continues to be) the subject of controversy and debate. Reforms that amalgamate governments and decentralise tasks intricately involve the administrative sphere in the affected institutions. The effects of such reforms are often measured based on administrative changes. Literature relating to such reforms has followed trends of amalgamation and decentralisation reforms since the 1970s. What has remained relatively unknown, however, is administrative dynamics at play during such reforms. In acknowledging that administrators play a role not only as implementors, but also shapers and contributors of policy, an important question has therefore lingered: what sort of behaviour can we observe among administrators undergoing, and involved in, significant institutional changes that amalgamation and decentralisation bring? In this thesis, I study the regional administrative sphere during two of the most contested public sector reforms in Norway of the last few decades. In three individual research papers, I measure and analyse regional administrators’ preferences towards coerced territorial amalgamation and decentralisation, and decision-making of municipal territorial structures by elite administrators. The three papers are connected through an overarching informative and interpretive framework of rescaling. The papers utilise rich survey and interview data, and subsequently involve both quantitative and qualitative methods for analysing them. The findings show that the rescaling framework can help us to understand the preferences and decisions among regional administrators involved in rescaling reforms. But as the rescaling phenomenon is multifaceted, so too are the findings. Administrators’ preferences and decisions are driven by arguments of functionality as well as issues of community and identity – but it depends on the particular form of rescaling. The findings contribute to the rescaling literature by demonstrating how the logics of rescaling mobilise preferences in the administrative sphere. It also contributes to our understanding of the factors that drive preferences and behaviour among administrators generally, and our understanding of regional administrators specifically. By focusing on the various procedural dynamics (coercion and voluntary amalgamation) it also demonstrates the type of rationalisation that increase support for controversial policies. This is important to know, as these administrators were not only involved in shaping the reforms but were (and are) also directly affected by them.en_US
dc.language.isoengen_US
dc.publisherThe University of Bergenen_US
dc.relation.haspartPaper I: Myksvoll, Thomas., Tatham, Michaël. and Fimreite, Anne Lise. 2022. “Understanding Bureaucratic Support for Coerced Institutional Change”. Governance 35 (4): 1119-1138. The article is available at: <a href="https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2836138" target="blank">https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2836138</a>en_US
dc.relation.haspartPaper II: Myksvoll, Thomas. 2020. “Reserved but Principled – and Sometimes Functional: Explaining Decentralisation Preferences Among Regional Bureaucrats”. Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration 24 (3): 73-101. The article is available at: <a href=" https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2836162" target="blank">https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2836162</a>en_US
dc.relation.haspartPaper III: Myksvoll, Thomas. “Discretionary Manoeuvrability: The Logics Behind Administrative Shaping of Territorial Rescaling”. The article is not available in BORA.en_US
dc.rightsAttribution (CC BY). This item's rights statement or license does not apply to the included articles in the thesis.
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.titleTarget, shaper, implementor : Regional Administrative Behaviour in the Rescaling of Norway’s Subnational Government Architectureen_US
dc.typeDoctoral thesisen_US
dc.date.updated2021-12-20T09:41:11.775Z
dc.rights.holderCopyright the Author.en_US
dc.contributor.orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7885-4132
dc.description.degreeDoktorgradsavhandling
fs.unitcode15-13-0


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Attribution (CC BY). This item's rights statement or license does not apply to the included articles in the thesis.
Med mindre annet er angitt, så er denne innførselen lisensiert som Attribution (CC BY). This item's rights statement or license does not apply to the included articles in the thesis.