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Self-Reflexivity: A Place for Religion and Spirituality in Public Administration
30
Citations
18
References
2005
Year
ReligiositySelect SetEducationAdministrative LeadershipPublic Personnel AdministrationOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesBureaucracyReligion StudiesGovernmental ProcessManagementChristian PracticePolitical ScienceCivic EngagementPublic PolicyMichael HarmonEmpirical StudyPublic Service MotivationSpiritualityGovernment AdministrationSocial Responsibility
This article describes an empirical study of a select set of mid-level managers in the federal government. The study examined the participant's capacity to engage in the kind of self-reflexivity that Michael Harmon calls for in his 1995 book Responsibility as Paradox: A Critique of Rational Discourse on Government. Specifically, it focuses on the reflections of two participants, both of whom asserted a direct relationship between their religious beliefs and their work as public administrators. Three implications for the discipline and practice of public administration are developed.
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