Description

Book Synopsis

A comprehensive guide to future-proofing public sector communication and increasing citizen satisfaction

How to communicate with the citizens of the future? Why does public sector communication often fail? Public Sector Communication combines practical examples from around the world with the latest theoretical insights to show how communication can help bridge gaps that exist between public sector organizations and the individual citizens they serve. The authorstwo experts in the field with experience from the public sectorexplain how public entities, be they cities, governments, foundations, agencies, authorities, municipalities, regulators, military, or government monopolies and state owned businesses can build their intangible assets to future-proof themselves in a volatile environment.

The book examines how the recent digitalization has increased citizen expectations and why one-way communication leaves public sector organizations fragile. To explain

Table of Contents

Part I 1

1 What Is Changing in Public Sector Communication? 3

1.1 The Change: Identifying the Gaps with Citizens 3

1.1.1 What Is Changing? 3

1.1.1.1 Change in Everyday Practice 3

1.1.1.2 Answering the Most Important Question 4

1.1.1.3 Changing Values? 5

1.1.2 Changes in Individuals: Citizens, Stakeholders, Customers, and Partners 5

1.1.2.1 Changes in Citizens’ Demands and Expectations 6

1.1.2.2 Citizen Communication Practices 6

1.1.2.3 Citizen Diversity 6

1.1.2.4 Changing Citizen Roles 7

1.1.3 The Traditional Gaps that Citizens Perceive When Assessing the Public Sector 7

1.1.3.1 Citizens Are from Venus, Public Authorities Are from Mars? 7

1.1.3.2 Gap 1: Speed: Bureaucracy versus Postbureaucracy 8

1.1.3.3 Gap 2: Privacy: Public versus Private Communication 8

1.1.3.4 Gap 3: Viewpoints: Process versus Answers 8

1.1.3.5 Gap 4: Context: Single Events versus General Attitude 9

1.1.3.6 Gap 5: Perceptions: Perception versus Performance 9

1.1.3.7 Gap 6: Roles: Obligations versus Rights 10

1.1.3.8 Gap 7: Media Use: Controlled versus Real Time 10

1.2 Framework for the Book 11

1.2.1 What Has Been Done on Public Sector Communication? 11

1.2.1.1 Earliest Works 11

1.2.1.2 Little Development despite the Relevance of the Topic 11

1.2.1.3 Nomenclature 12

1.2.1.4 Mapping Contributions from Different Fields to the Study of Public Sector Communication 12

1.2.2 The Three Pillars of this Book 16

1.2.2.1 The Intangible Nature of Public Sector Management 16

1.2.2.2 Knowledge for Practice, Practice for Knowledge 17

1.2.2.3 Considering Public Sector Communication from an International Perspective 17

1.2.3 Plan of the Book 17

References 18

2 What Is So Special about Public Sector Communication? 25

2.1 What Is the Public Sector? 25

2.1.1 Initial Basic Definitions 25

2.1.2 Is This Public or Private? 26

2.1.3 Scholarly Approaches to Establishing Criteria of Publicness 27

2.1.4 The Rings of Publicness 28

2.1.5 The Publicness Fan 28

2.2 Defining Public Sector Communication 30

2.2.1 Mapping Scholarly Definitions 30

2.2.2 Some Insights from Practice 32

2.2.3 Our Definition of Public Sector Communication 33

2.3 Looking at Public Sector Communication from the Publicness Fan 33

2.3.1 Different Communication? 33

2.3.2 How Public Is This and Hence How Should Intangibles and Communication be Managed? 35

2.3.2.1 Funding and Profit 36

2.3.2.2 “Ownership” and “Employees” 37

2.3.2.3 Control and Accountability 38

2.3.2.4 Purpose and Values 39

References 40

3 Fragile Public Sector Organizations 45

3.1 A Brief History of Public Sector Organizations’ Development 45

3.2 Global Trends in Public Sector Management: An Overview 46

3.3 Is There a Need for Intangible Assets? 47

3.3.1 From New Public Management to New Public Service 47

3.3.2 From Management to Public Value 48

3.4 The Fragility of Public Sector Organizations 50

3.4.1 Distrust 50

3.4.2 Services and Experiences 51

3.4.3 Bureaucracy 52

3.4.4 The Political Dimension 52

3.4.5 A Tactical Approach 53

3.5 Expectations as a Cause for Public Sector Fragility 54

3.5.1 How Citizen Expectations Are Changing 54

3.5.2 Expectations through Experiences 56

3.5.3 Unmet Expectations 56

References 57

4 Antifragile Communication: Closing the Gap through Intangible Assets 65

4.1 Defining “Intangible Asset” 65

4.1.1 What Is an Intangible Asset About? 65

4.1.2 Pinning Down Intangibility 66

4.1.3 The Features of an Intangible Asset 67

4.2 Types of Intangibles 67

4.2.1 Accounting Categorizations 67

4.2.2 Relationships and Perceptions as the Basis for Intangible Assets that Aim to Build Competitive Advantage 69

4.3 Why Are Intangibles Different in the Public Sector? 70

4.3.1 What Is the Value of Intangibility in the Public Sector? 72

4.3.2 Building Intangible Assets: Is It Possible? 73

4.4 Different Intangible Assets in the Public Sector 74

4.5 Avoiding Fragility through Intangible Assets 74

4.5.1 Antifragile Communication: Taking the Citizen Point of View 75

4.5.2 The Steps toward Antifragility 76

4.6 Intangible Assets in this Book 77

4.6.1 Definition of Intangible Asset in the Public Sector 77

4.6.2 Different Intangible Assets and the Relationships between Them 78

References 79

Part II 83

5 Satisfaction 85

5.1 What Is Satisfaction? 85

5.2 Experiences and Satisfaction 86

5.3 Why Should Public Organizations Care About Citizen Satisfaction? 87

5.4 Communication and Satisfaction 88

5.5 Measuring Citizen Satisfaction 89

5.5.1 The Purpose of Measuring 89

5.5.2 Do Measurement Tools from the Private Sector Suit the Public Sector? 91

5.6 Summary of Citizen Satisfaction 92

5.7 Case Study on Citizen Satisfaction 93

5.8 Route Guide to Building Citizen Satisfaction 96

References 97

6 Organizational Culture 101

6.1 Organizations’ Invisible Cultures 101

6.2 Defining Organizational Culture 103

6.3 What Benefit Does Organizational Culture Bring? 104

6.4 Public Sector Organizational Culture 105

6.5 Subcultures 106

6.6 Communication and Public Sector Culture 107

6.6.1 Gaps that Public Sector Culture Can Fix 107

6.6.2 What to Measure in Practice? 110

6.7 Changing Organizational Culture 110

6.8 Criticism of Organizational Culture 112

6.9 Summary of Organizational Culture 112

6.10 Case Study on Organizational Culture 113

6.11 Route Guide to Changing Organizational Culture 116

References 117

7 Reputation 121

7.1 What Is the Logic behind Organizational Reputation? 121

7.2 How the Digital Environment Shapes Reputation 122

7.3 Organizational Reputation Defined 124

7.4 The Benefits of a Good Reputation 125

7.5 Public Sector Organizations and Reputation 126

7.5.1 Reputation in a Context of Lower Competition 126

7.5.2 Neutral Reputation as Ideal for Public Sector Organizations 127

7.6 Measuring Public Sector Reputation 128

7.7 Two Examples of Measuring Reputation 131

7.8 Summary of Public Sector Reputation 133

7.9 Route Guide to Building Organizational Reputation 135

References 136

8 Legitimacy 139

8.1 Conferring Legitimacy upon Public Sector Organizations: What Does It Mean? 139

8.2 The Legitimacy Judgment: What Confers Organizational Legitimacy in the Public Sector? 141

8.2.1 Achievements versus Procedures 141

8.2.2 Typologies of Legitimacy 141

8.2.3 Moral Legitimacy 142

8.3 Resources Generated by Legitimacy 143

8.4 Communication and Legitimacy Building 144

8.4.1 Being Acknowledged as Legitimate 145

8.4.2 Legitimacy Building as Sense Making 145

8.5 How Legitimacy Typologies Help Legitimacy Builders 146

8.6 Building Legitimacy 147

8.7 Critical Issues and Further Research 149

8.8 Summary of Legitimacy 151

8.9 Case Study on Legitimacy 151

8.10 Route Guide to Building Legitimacy 154

References 155

9 Intellectual Capital 159

9.1 What Intellectual Capital Is About 159

9.1.1 Definition 159

9.1.2 What Has Been Done So Far on Intellectual Capital in the Public Sector? 160

9.2 Why is Intellectual Capital Needed? 161

9.3 What Resources Does Intellectual Capital Generate? Measuring Intellectual Capital 163

9.3.1 What Does Intellectual Capital Tell Us About? The Dimensions of IC 163

9.3.2 Measuring Intellectual Capital in the Public Sector 164

9.4 Communicating Intellectual Capital 166

9.4.1 Does Communication Play a Role in the Acknowledgement of Intellectual Capital? 166

9.4.2 Intellectual Capital Management and Communication Management 167

9.5 Critical Issues, Unanswered Questions, and Future Research 168

9.6 Summary of Intellectual Capital 169

9.7 Case Study on Intellectual Capital 170

9.8 Route Guide to Building Intellectual Capital 174

References 175

10 Engagement 179

10.1 What Citizen Engagement Is About 179

10.1.1 Looking at Engagement from the Citizen Side 179

10.1.2 Engagement from the Organization Side: The Role of Public Administrations in Engaging Citizens 180

10.2 Going Deeper into Public Sector Engagement 181

10.2.1 Governmental Efforts to Involve Citizens 182

10.2.2 Deepening Engagement: The Coproduction Perspective 182

10.3 Why Is Engagement Needed? 185

10.3.1 The Context for an Increasing Concern with and Practice of Citizen Engagement 185

10.3.2 What Specific Gaps Does Engagement Help to Bridge? 185

10.4 Outcomes of Engagement: Calibrating Its Value as an Intangible Asset 186

10.4.1 A General Positive Assessment of the Impact of Engagement 186

10.4.2 More Mixed Evidence that Cannot Be Disregarded 187

10.4.3 Engagement Effects for the Organization: The Managerial Side 188

10.4.4 Benefit for Both Sides: The Cobenefit of Coproduction 188

10.5 Building and Communicating Engagement 189

10.6 Summary of Engagement 190

10.7 Case Study on Public Sector Engagement 191

10.8 Route Guide to Building Engagement 196

References 197

11 Social Capital 201

11.1 Theory of Social Capital 201

11.2 What Kind of Value Does Social Capital Produce? 203

11.3 What Kind of Gaps Does Social Capital Help to Bridge? 205

11.4 Communicating Social Capital 206

11.5 What Does This Mean for Public Sector Organizations’ Communication Management? 207

11.6 Measuring Social Capital 209

11.7 Are All Networks Real? 210

11.8 Closing the Gap through Social Capital 211

11.9 Future Research on Social Capital 212

11.10 Summary of Social Capital 213

11.11 Case Study on Social Capital in the Public Sector 213

11.12 Route Guide to Building Social Capital 216

References 216

12 Trust 221

12.1 Why Does Trust Matter? The Intangible and Tangible Value of Trust 221

12.2 What Is Trust? 223

12.2.1 What is Trust About? 223

12.2.2 Can There Be Trust in Public Sector Organizations? 224

12.3 Trust in the Public Sector 224

12.3.1 Political Trust, Public Trust, and Trust in Government 225

12.3.2 Trust in Public Administration 226

12.3.3 Going Beyond the Public Administration: Trust in the Public Sector 226

12.4 Sources of Trust: What Generates Trust in the Public Sector? 227

12.4.1 Demographics 228

12.4.2 Political Attitudes as Explainers of Trust 228

12.4.3 The Influence of Events Management 228

12.4.4 Performance as a Source of Trust 228

12.5 Other Intangible Assets as Causes of Trust 229

12.6 Trust and Communication: Building Trust 232

12.7 Critical Issues and Further Research 233

12.7.1 Is There a Trend of Decreasing Trust in Public Sector Organizations? 233

12.7.2 Debated Issues about Measuring Trust 235

12.8 Summary of Trust 236

References 237

13 Closing the Gaps 243

13.1 How Can We Close the Gap between Citizens and Public Sector Organizations? 243

13.1.1 Closing Gap 1: Speed: Bureaucracy versus Postbureaucracy 246

13.1.2 Closing Gap 2: Privacy: Public versus Private Communication 246

13.1.3 Closing Gap 3: Viewpoints: Process versus Answers 246

13.1.4 Closing Gap 4: Context: Single Events versus General Attitude 247

13.1.5 Closing Gap 5: Perceptions: Perception versus Performance 247

13.1.6 Closing Gap 6: Roles: Obligations versus Rights 247

13.1.7 Closing Gap 7: Media Use: Controlled versus Real Time 248

13.2 Expectations Management to Build Intangibles that Bridge Gaps 248

13.2.1 Concluding Remarks 252

References 253

Index 255

Public Sector Communication

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 23 Dec 2025.

A Paperback / softback by María José Canel, Vilma Luoma-aho

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Public Sector Communication by María José Canel

    Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
    Publication Date: 17/07/2018
    ISBN13: 9781119135579, 978-1119135579
    ISBN10: 1119135575

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    A comprehensive guide to future-proofing public sector communication and increasing citizen satisfaction

    How to communicate with the citizens of the future? Why does public sector communication often fail? Public Sector Communication combines practical examples from around the world with the latest theoretical insights to show how communication can help bridge gaps that exist between public sector organizations and the individual citizens they serve. The authorstwo experts in the field with experience from the public sectorexplain how public entities, be they cities, governments, foundations, agencies, authorities, municipalities, regulators, military, or government monopolies and state owned businesses can build their intangible assets to future-proof themselves in a volatile environment.

    The book examines how the recent digitalization has increased citizen expectations and why one-way communication leaves public sector organizations fragile. To explain

    Table of Contents

    Part I 1

    1 What Is Changing in Public Sector Communication? 3

    1.1 The Change: Identifying the Gaps with Citizens 3

    1.1.1 What Is Changing? 3

    1.1.1.1 Change in Everyday Practice 3

    1.1.1.2 Answering the Most Important Question 4

    1.1.1.3 Changing Values? 5

    1.1.2 Changes in Individuals: Citizens, Stakeholders, Customers, and Partners 5

    1.1.2.1 Changes in Citizens’ Demands and Expectations 6

    1.1.2.2 Citizen Communication Practices 6

    1.1.2.3 Citizen Diversity 6

    1.1.2.4 Changing Citizen Roles 7

    1.1.3 The Traditional Gaps that Citizens Perceive When Assessing the Public Sector 7

    1.1.3.1 Citizens Are from Venus, Public Authorities Are from Mars? 7

    1.1.3.2 Gap 1: Speed: Bureaucracy versus Postbureaucracy 8

    1.1.3.3 Gap 2: Privacy: Public versus Private Communication 8

    1.1.3.4 Gap 3: Viewpoints: Process versus Answers 8

    1.1.3.5 Gap 4: Context: Single Events versus General Attitude 9

    1.1.3.6 Gap 5: Perceptions: Perception versus Performance 9

    1.1.3.7 Gap 6: Roles: Obligations versus Rights 10

    1.1.3.8 Gap 7: Media Use: Controlled versus Real Time 10

    1.2 Framework for the Book 11

    1.2.1 What Has Been Done on Public Sector Communication? 11

    1.2.1.1 Earliest Works 11

    1.2.1.2 Little Development despite the Relevance of the Topic 11

    1.2.1.3 Nomenclature 12

    1.2.1.4 Mapping Contributions from Different Fields to the Study of Public Sector Communication 12

    1.2.2 The Three Pillars of this Book 16

    1.2.2.1 The Intangible Nature of Public Sector Management 16

    1.2.2.2 Knowledge for Practice, Practice for Knowledge 17

    1.2.2.3 Considering Public Sector Communication from an International Perspective 17

    1.2.3 Plan of the Book 17

    References 18

    2 What Is So Special about Public Sector Communication? 25

    2.1 What Is the Public Sector? 25

    2.1.1 Initial Basic Definitions 25

    2.1.2 Is This Public or Private? 26

    2.1.3 Scholarly Approaches to Establishing Criteria of Publicness 27

    2.1.4 The Rings of Publicness 28

    2.1.5 The Publicness Fan 28

    2.2 Defining Public Sector Communication 30

    2.2.1 Mapping Scholarly Definitions 30

    2.2.2 Some Insights from Practice 32

    2.2.3 Our Definition of Public Sector Communication 33

    2.3 Looking at Public Sector Communication from the Publicness Fan 33

    2.3.1 Different Communication? 33

    2.3.2 How Public Is This and Hence How Should Intangibles and Communication be Managed? 35

    2.3.2.1 Funding and Profit 36

    2.3.2.2 “Ownership” and “Employees” 37

    2.3.2.3 Control and Accountability 38

    2.3.2.4 Purpose and Values 39

    References 40

    3 Fragile Public Sector Organizations 45

    3.1 A Brief History of Public Sector Organizations’ Development 45

    3.2 Global Trends in Public Sector Management: An Overview 46

    3.3 Is There a Need for Intangible Assets? 47

    3.3.1 From New Public Management to New Public Service 47

    3.3.2 From Management to Public Value 48

    3.4 The Fragility of Public Sector Organizations 50

    3.4.1 Distrust 50

    3.4.2 Services and Experiences 51

    3.4.3 Bureaucracy 52

    3.4.4 The Political Dimension 52

    3.4.5 A Tactical Approach 53

    3.5 Expectations as a Cause for Public Sector Fragility 54

    3.5.1 How Citizen Expectations Are Changing 54

    3.5.2 Expectations through Experiences 56

    3.5.3 Unmet Expectations 56

    References 57

    4 Antifragile Communication: Closing the Gap through Intangible Assets 65

    4.1 Defining “Intangible Asset” 65

    4.1.1 What Is an Intangible Asset About? 65

    4.1.2 Pinning Down Intangibility 66

    4.1.3 The Features of an Intangible Asset 67

    4.2 Types of Intangibles 67

    4.2.1 Accounting Categorizations 67

    4.2.2 Relationships and Perceptions as the Basis for Intangible Assets that Aim to Build Competitive Advantage 69

    4.3 Why Are Intangibles Different in the Public Sector? 70

    4.3.1 What Is the Value of Intangibility in the Public Sector? 72

    4.3.2 Building Intangible Assets: Is It Possible? 73

    4.4 Different Intangible Assets in the Public Sector 74

    4.5 Avoiding Fragility through Intangible Assets 74

    4.5.1 Antifragile Communication: Taking the Citizen Point of View 75

    4.5.2 The Steps toward Antifragility 76

    4.6 Intangible Assets in this Book 77

    4.6.1 Definition of Intangible Asset in the Public Sector 77

    4.6.2 Different Intangible Assets and the Relationships between Them 78

    References 79

    Part II 83

    5 Satisfaction 85

    5.1 What Is Satisfaction? 85

    5.2 Experiences and Satisfaction 86

    5.3 Why Should Public Organizations Care About Citizen Satisfaction? 87

    5.4 Communication and Satisfaction 88

    5.5 Measuring Citizen Satisfaction 89

    5.5.1 The Purpose of Measuring 89

    5.5.2 Do Measurement Tools from the Private Sector Suit the Public Sector? 91

    5.6 Summary of Citizen Satisfaction 92

    5.7 Case Study on Citizen Satisfaction 93

    5.8 Route Guide to Building Citizen Satisfaction 96

    References 97

    6 Organizational Culture 101

    6.1 Organizations’ Invisible Cultures 101

    6.2 Defining Organizational Culture 103

    6.3 What Benefit Does Organizational Culture Bring? 104

    6.4 Public Sector Organizational Culture 105

    6.5 Subcultures 106

    6.6 Communication and Public Sector Culture 107

    6.6.1 Gaps that Public Sector Culture Can Fix 107

    6.6.2 What to Measure in Practice? 110

    6.7 Changing Organizational Culture 110

    6.8 Criticism of Organizational Culture 112

    6.9 Summary of Organizational Culture 112

    6.10 Case Study on Organizational Culture 113

    6.11 Route Guide to Changing Organizational Culture 116

    References 117

    7 Reputation 121

    7.1 What Is the Logic behind Organizational Reputation? 121

    7.2 How the Digital Environment Shapes Reputation 122

    7.3 Organizational Reputation Defined 124

    7.4 The Benefits of a Good Reputation 125

    7.5 Public Sector Organizations and Reputation 126

    7.5.1 Reputation in a Context of Lower Competition 126

    7.5.2 Neutral Reputation as Ideal for Public Sector Organizations 127

    7.6 Measuring Public Sector Reputation 128

    7.7 Two Examples of Measuring Reputation 131

    7.8 Summary of Public Sector Reputation 133

    7.9 Route Guide to Building Organizational Reputation 135

    References 136

    8 Legitimacy 139

    8.1 Conferring Legitimacy upon Public Sector Organizations: What Does It Mean? 139

    8.2 The Legitimacy Judgment: What Confers Organizational Legitimacy in the Public Sector? 141

    8.2.1 Achievements versus Procedures 141

    8.2.2 Typologies of Legitimacy 141

    8.2.3 Moral Legitimacy 142

    8.3 Resources Generated by Legitimacy 143

    8.4 Communication and Legitimacy Building 144

    8.4.1 Being Acknowledged as Legitimate 145

    8.4.2 Legitimacy Building as Sense Making 145

    8.5 How Legitimacy Typologies Help Legitimacy Builders 146

    8.6 Building Legitimacy 147

    8.7 Critical Issues and Further Research 149

    8.8 Summary of Legitimacy 151

    8.9 Case Study on Legitimacy 151

    8.10 Route Guide to Building Legitimacy 154

    References 155

    9 Intellectual Capital 159

    9.1 What Intellectual Capital Is About 159

    9.1.1 Definition 159

    9.1.2 What Has Been Done So Far on Intellectual Capital in the Public Sector? 160

    9.2 Why is Intellectual Capital Needed? 161

    9.3 What Resources Does Intellectual Capital Generate? Measuring Intellectual Capital 163

    9.3.1 What Does Intellectual Capital Tell Us About? The Dimensions of IC 163

    9.3.2 Measuring Intellectual Capital in the Public Sector 164

    9.4 Communicating Intellectual Capital 166

    9.4.1 Does Communication Play a Role in the Acknowledgement of Intellectual Capital? 166

    9.4.2 Intellectual Capital Management and Communication Management 167

    9.5 Critical Issues, Unanswered Questions, and Future Research 168

    9.6 Summary of Intellectual Capital 169

    9.7 Case Study on Intellectual Capital 170

    9.8 Route Guide to Building Intellectual Capital 174

    References 175

    10 Engagement 179

    10.1 What Citizen Engagement Is About 179

    10.1.1 Looking at Engagement from the Citizen Side 179

    10.1.2 Engagement from the Organization Side: The Role of Public Administrations in Engaging Citizens 180

    10.2 Going Deeper into Public Sector Engagement 181

    10.2.1 Governmental Efforts to Involve Citizens 182

    10.2.2 Deepening Engagement: The Coproduction Perspective 182

    10.3 Why Is Engagement Needed? 185

    10.3.1 The Context for an Increasing Concern with and Practice of Citizen Engagement 185

    10.3.2 What Specific Gaps Does Engagement Help to Bridge? 185

    10.4 Outcomes of Engagement: Calibrating Its Value as an Intangible Asset 186

    10.4.1 A General Positive Assessment of the Impact of Engagement 186

    10.4.2 More Mixed Evidence that Cannot Be Disregarded 187

    10.4.3 Engagement Effects for the Organization: The Managerial Side 188

    10.4.4 Benefit for Both Sides: The Cobenefit of Coproduction 188

    10.5 Building and Communicating Engagement 189

    10.6 Summary of Engagement 190

    10.7 Case Study on Public Sector Engagement 191

    10.8 Route Guide to Building Engagement 196

    References 197

    11 Social Capital 201

    11.1 Theory of Social Capital 201

    11.2 What Kind of Value Does Social Capital Produce? 203

    11.3 What Kind of Gaps Does Social Capital Help to Bridge? 205

    11.4 Communicating Social Capital 206

    11.5 What Does This Mean for Public Sector Organizations’ Communication Management? 207

    11.6 Measuring Social Capital 209

    11.7 Are All Networks Real? 210

    11.8 Closing the Gap through Social Capital 211

    11.9 Future Research on Social Capital 212

    11.10 Summary of Social Capital 213

    11.11 Case Study on Social Capital in the Public Sector 213

    11.12 Route Guide to Building Social Capital 216

    References 216

    12 Trust 221

    12.1 Why Does Trust Matter? The Intangible and Tangible Value of Trust 221

    12.2 What Is Trust? 223

    12.2.1 What is Trust About? 223

    12.2.2 Can There Be Trust in Public Sector Organizations? 224

    12.3 Trust in the Public Sector 224

    12.3.1 Political Trust, Public Trust, and Trust in Government 225

    12.3.2 Trust in Public Administration 226

    12.3.3 Going Beyond the Public Administration: Trust in the Public Sector 226

    12.4 Sources of Trust: What Generates Trust in the Public Sector? 227

    12.4.1 Demographics 228

    12.4.2 Political Attitudes as Explainers of Trust 228

    12.4.3 The Influence of Events Management 228

    12.4.4 Performance as a Source of Trust 228

    12.5 Other Intangible Assets as Causes of Trust 229

    12.6 Trust and Communication: Building Trust 232

    12.7 Critical Issues and Further Research 233

    12.7.1 Is There a Trend of Decreasing Trust in Public Sector Organizations? 233

    12.7.2 Debated Issues about Measuring Trust 235

    12.8 Summary of Trust 236

    References 237

    13 Closing the Gaps 243

    13.1 How Can We Close the Gap between Citizens and Public Sector Organizations? 243

    13.1.1 Closing Gap 1: Speed: Bureaucracy versus Postbureaucracy 246

    13.1.2 Closing Gap 2: Privacy: Public versus Private Communication 246

    13.1.3 Closing Gap 3: Viewpoints: Process versus Answers 246

    13.1.4 Closing Gap 4: Context: Single Events versus General Attitude 247

    13.1.5 Closing Gap 5: Perceptions: Perception versus Performance 247

    13.1.6 Closing Gap 6: Roles: Obligations versus Rights 247

    13.1.7 Closing Gap 7: Media Use: Controlled versus Real Time 248

    13.2 Expectations Management to Build Intangibles that Bridge Gaps 248

    13.2.1 Concluding Remarks 252

    References 253

    Index 255

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