Organizational Change,Politics, and the Official Statistics of Punishment |
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Authors: | O'Neill Karen M. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Human Ecology Department, Rutgers University, Cook Ofc. Building, 55 Dudley Road, New Brunswick, New Jersey, 08901-8520 |
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Abstract: | Most organizational researchers characterize politics as a force organizations experience from outside and administration as the practices managers adopt in response to the uncertain environment. To assess that approach, this paper examines a crisis that changed California criminal justice agencies' administrative practices and their communication of statistical information to outsiders. In 1976, managers and wardens supported conservative reform bills that effectively ended professional criminal rehabilitation and quantitative evaluation studies, and they shifted administration toward bureaucratic controls, using routine population counts. Changes in agency statistical activities clarify how members of government organizations act politically to maintain or change administrative practices. |
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Keywords: | government statistics organizational control structures organizational environment criminal sentencing |
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