It is a distinct honor to be recognized for career achievements with the John Gaus Award. My thanks to my nominators, the Gaus Award selection committee, my wife and family, and the many mentors, students, and collaborators who have supported me throughout my career. In particular, I would like to acknowledge the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University, Bloomington for being a congenial home for my professional life since 1985.
One of the first articles I read as a graduate student was John Gaus’s (Reference Gaus1947) “Ecology of Government,” so I have long been aware of John Gaus’s standing in the fields of political science and public administration. I was not aware, however, of just how important John Gaus’s contributions were to the early years of public administration in the United States until I began preparing this essay. It is indeed my pleasure to be associated with his legacy.
My priorities and attention during the past six years were shaped significantly by my role as editor in chief of Public Administration Review (PAR), which for the past 77 years has been the preeminent outlet for both scholars and practitioners of public administration. My choice of topic for this essay—professionalism in public administration—is a product of my experiences as PAR’s editor. My topic also has roots in my graduate student days, when I first became concerned about what public administration represented and what that meant, not only for the field’s identity, but for my own identity, too.
As PAR editor, I have had a less-than-encouraging venture with professions. In 2012, in preparation for the American Society for Public Administration’s (ASPA) 75th anniversary in 2014, I issued a call for submissions (Public Administration Review 2012) about cutting-edge perspectives on public service professionalism. My questions prompted consideration about the status of public administration as a profession and the means by which public service professionalism is assessed: Is there a public service professionalism? What metrics can be developed to assess professionalism in public service? What is the role of oaths, codes of conduct, and accreditation? How can the professions and professionals be developed for public service? The call yielded about 40 proposals. I authorized about 25 of the proposals to be developed into papers for peer review. PAR ultimately published just two of the papers submitted for review. Despite a relatively strong response to the call, we were not able to surface cutting-edge perspectives on public service professionalism.
My failed search for content was frustrating. Subsequent experiences as PAR’s editor did not alter my impressions. This inability to unearth meaningful scholarship on these topics has left me with the conviction that the field still lacks the tools and grounding to speak authoritatively about public professionalism. I am not alone in my frustration (Streib n.d.), but I have no easy or quantifiable way to measure the felt frustration among others in the field. This essay is intended to prompt a solution by making the case for more robust research and attention to professionalism in public administration. Footnote 1 Doing so would, I believe, provide not only a means to establish a clear identity for the field but also a context for important aspects of public administration theory and research, as well as a pathway for integrating disparate research streams.
My thesis: Public administration would be well served to pursue professionalism as a core theme because it is a central construct for understanding and acting in public administrative contexts. Although public administration has occasionally embraced professionalism, such efforts have failed to stimulate a critical mass of scholarly and practitioner activity. This essay presents the case for professionalism in three stages. First, I highlight literature that emphasizes professionalism as a means of establishing an identity for public administration, and I assess progress to date. Next, I offer some ideas for setting a course to make professionalism a robust feature of public administration. I conclude with a discussion of benefits that could accrue from pursuing these proposals.
The title of this essay is crafted to remind readers of previous articles that had a similar purpose and were influential in popularizing lines of research that, prior to their publication, had received only modest attention. One of them is by Laurence J. O’Toole, a Gaus Award winner and my classmate at the Maxwell School at Syracuse University, titled “Treating Networks Seriously: Practical and Research-Based Agendas in Public Administration” (O’Toole Reference O’Toole1997), which was recognized in 2015 as among PAR’s 75 most influential articles. Footnote 2 I have no pretense that this treatise will be as influential as Larry’s, but there is no harm in trying!
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION’S EMBRACE OF PROFESSIONALISM
We begin with a definition of profession from William Sullivan:
…an occupation characterized by three features: specialized training in a field of codified knowledge usually acquired by formal education and apprenticeship, public recognition of a certain autonomy on the part of a community of practitioners to regulate their own standards of practice, and a commitment to provide service to the public that goes beyond the economic welfare of the practitioner (Sullivan Reference Sullivan2005, 36).
This definition, or a close approximation of it, has been the starting point for discussion and debate about professions in public administration since at least the 1960s. Throughout this essay, I’ll unpack this definition and examine its applicability to public administration.
Professions and professionalism have long been important in public administration (see Gargan Reference Gargan, Rabin, Bardey Hildreth and Miller2006 for an extensive review of the literature). The concept of merit (Ingraham Reference Ingraham1995), upon which the field was founded, is a precursor to the ideas we associate with professionalism today. The Progressives embraced the ideas embedded in professions; the movement was the source of many “polity professions” (civic service professions), among them city managers, social workers, and political scientists (Stever Reference Stever1987).
Although I have not sought to identify the first substantive reference to “profession” in the public administration and political science literatures, we do know that John Gaus was a champion for the professions long before the term became popular in the public administration literature. In “The Responsibility of Public Administration” he writes:
Throughout the country the professional organizations of public servants … are similarly working in close association with university departments of political science and with governmental research organizations in the effort to improve the quality of administration and to introduce the note of research, inquiry, and self-examination into the day-to-day life of the public servant (Gaus Reference Gaus, Gaus, White and Dimock1936, 41–42).
His observations about responsibility and the administrative profession were not limited to the United States alone. He commented about developments in Great Britain, Germany, and Scandinavia. At the time of his observations, Gaus saw “the attitude of the civil servant as an individual toward his work and his profession” (Reference Gaus, Gaus, White and Dimock1936, 43) as the most important driver of responsibility.
1968 as a Pivotal Juncture
The year 1968 may have been a watershed in the field’s embrace of professionalism. Dwight Waldo (Reference Waldo and Charlesworth1968), analyzing the scope of the theory of public administration, proposed that public administration adopt a professional perspective as a way to address its identity crisis. Waldo (1968, 10) wrote: “What I propose is that we try to act as a profession without actually being one, and perhaps even without the hope or intention of becoming one in any strict sense.” Waldo endorsed the spirit of professionalism, but was clearly reluctant to embrace all its implications.
In the same year that Waldo thus reflected about the direction of the field, Frederick Mosher published the first edition of his influential Democracy and the Public Service (1968). Arguably, the most influential aspect of Mosher’s book was his attention to the professions. It is hard to imagine today, but Mosher’s focus on the importance of professionals was relatively novel at the time. Scholars had previously given little formal recognition to professions in public service and their influence in shaping policy and its implementation. Mosher wrote:
Our dependence upon professionals is now so great that the orientations, value systems, and ethics which they bring to their work and which they enforce on one another are a matter of prime concern to those who would strengthen the democratic system (Mosher Reference Mosher1968, 10).
Beyond the issue of the incidence of professionals in public service, Mosher was interested in who controlled them and to whom they were accountable.
For better or worse—or better and worse—much of our government is now in the hands of professionals (including scientists). The choice of these professionals, the determination of their skills, and the content of their work are now principally determined, not by general governmental agencies, but by their own professional elites, professional organizations, and the institutions and faculties of higher education (Mosher Reference Mosher1968, 132).
Having studied under Waldo and having cut my scholarly teeth on Mosher, I attempted to bring a similar focus to professionalism in my own work. In three editions of the Handbook of Public Administration (Perry Reference Perry1989; Perry Reference Perry1996a; Perry and Christensen Reference Perry and Christensen2015), I was very intentional to emphasize the professional dimension of public administration.
Having studied under Waldo and having cut my scholarly teeth on Mosher, I attempted to bring a similar focus to professionalism in my own work. In three editions of the Handbook of Public Administration (Perry Reference Perry1989; Perry Reference Perry1996a; Perry and Christensen Reference Perry and Christensen2015), I was very intentional to emphasize the professional dimension of public administration. The preface to each edition acknowledged the professional nature of public administration, as did the last part of each edition, which was titled “The Professional Practice of Public Administration.” I wrote in the preface to the first edition (Perry Reference Perry1989): “Written by public administration experts from all areas of the field—law, politics, public policy, finance, personnel, operations, and others—it is designed to meet the needs of the range of professionals who work in government or interact with public agencies” (xiv).
How Have We Done?
Nearly three decades after Waldo (Reference Waldo and Charlesworth1968) first proposed embracing profession as a means to clarify the field’s identity, Philip Jos and Mark Tompkins (1995) assessed the results of the drive toward professionalism. Their conclusion was direct and unequivocal: the professional focus has not helped and should be relinquished. Their critique rests on the premise “that appeals to professionalism fail to take account of the diversity of tasks performed in the public sector and tend to mis-characterize the sort of complexity that public managers and other public employees encounter” (Jos and Tompkins Reference Jos and Tompkins1995, 208). They concluded that the professional ideal, even if revised to avoid claims to autonomous practice, should be abandoned.
While I agree with Jos and Tompkins (Reference Jos and Tompkins1995) that the field of public administration has not reaped the benefits that Waldo and others expected from a focus on professionalism, I dispute their conclusion that such a focus is futile. The reasons the field has not reaped expected benefits is multi-faceted, and includes a failure to frame research about professionalism to capture the diversity and complexity of public service, a dearth of empirical research to ground our understanding of professions and professionalism in public service, and expectations that exceeded what a professionalism focus could achieve. Given these limitations in the efforts that preceded their analysis, I disagree with Jos and Tompkins’ (1995) conclusion that professionalism should be abandoned. I offer instead some ideas for redirecting the way the field thinks about professionalism to make this effort more robust and sustainable.
WHAT IS PROPOSED AS A WAY FORWARD?
Taking professions seriously requires a renewed commitment from public administration in which scholars embark on a mission of building knowledge about professions in public service. The discussion below sets out details of my proposal.
One facet of professions in public administration that is largely uncontested is Mosher’s point that public service is professional. March 2017 is the latest report for which US federal employment data are available. FedScope puts total federal employment at 2,087,715. The total number of employees classified as professional is 568,867, more than 25% of total US federal employment. Identifiable professions are well represented, including nurses (84,522), medical officers (34,876), general attorneys (38,489), and general engineers (26,691).
Despite this occupational representation in public service, the discussion of professions turns contentious when the reality or desirability of one or more of the attributes of professions comes into play. This forum does not permit me to discuss the controversies at any length, but I can identify some of the contours of the debate. They include: (1) threshold questions about the amount and nature of training to qualify an occupation as a profession; (2) concerns about the implications of autonomy and self-regulation for democratic governance and accountability (Green, Keller, and Wamsley Reference Green, Keller and Wamsley1993); and (3) whether professions obligate their members to commitments to public service that transcend the economic welfare of individual members. Although these debates have stalled movement on public administration’s professional agenda, I believe progress is possible. In the next section I discuss steps to facilitate progress.
How Should We Conceive Professionalism in Public Contexts?
I propose alternative ways to think about professionalism in public service to lead us from the cul-de-sac in which we have been lost for the quarter century since Green et al. (Reference Green, Keller and Wamsley1993) and Jos and Tompkins (Reference Jos and Tompkins1995) offered their assessments. My proposal has four parts:
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1. Concept names. Adopt an alternative concept name to capture the phenomenon of interest to convey the limitations of the sociological meanings of profession when studying the phenomenon in the public administration context. The construct name “public service professionalism” seems better suited to the history and intent of the construct in public administration than other iterations of “profession.”
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2. Construct dimensionality. Accept a two-pronged conceptualization of public service professionalism as (1) instrumental, focused largely on effectiveness of administrative action, and (2) normative, attentive to the substance and fidelity of obligations to the governance regime.
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3. Multi-level units of analysis. Public service professionalism, and the normative obligations of public servants (Waldo Reference Waldo1988), is a complex phenomenon. Research about public service professionalism should incorporate several levels of analysis, ranging from institutions to operations.
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4. Plural in contrast to universal. We are unlikely to encounter a universal public service professionalism. Instead, multiple conceptions of public service professionalism are likely to coexist due to the complex institutional and structural arrangements in which public administrators are embedded.
Concept Name
I learned early in my career that concept names can make a difference in launching a research agenda. As an assistant professor, I first encountered the issue in the context of research on organizational commitment (Angle and Perry Reference Angle and Perry1981; Angle and Perry Reference Angle and Perry1983). I benefitted from observing my first dean and distinguished scholar, Lyman Porter, his PhD students, and their research team build the concept of organizational commitment from inchoate phenomena into a highly regarded and influential line of research (Mowday, Porter, and Steers Reference Mowday, Porter and Steers1982). It was clear that in selecting the concept name, they were able simultaneously to capture its attributes and differentiate it from everyday language that impeded scientific progress.
This lesson about the importance of concept names can be applied to public administration scholars’ study of professions. Dwight Waldo’s (1968) dislike for using the professional label lingers to this day. References to professions often include concerns expressed about “narrow and selfish professionalism” (Gaus Reference Gaus, Gaus, White and Dimock1936, 43), undemocratic autonomy (Rosenbloom 1982; Green, Keller, and Wamsley 1993), technical professionalism (Brint Reference Brint1994; Perry Reference Perry2007), distorting appreciation of “broad public policy issues” (Schott Reference Schott1976, 257), and diminishing popular participation and popular control (Bowman 1982-83). Public administration has embraced professions and professionalism, but it is obvious that many commentators, particularly scholars, are not happy about that choice!
A solution to the tension associated with terminology is to change the rhetoric (Green, Keller, and Wamsley Reference Green, Keller and Wamsley1993) and move toward more broadly accepted labels that carry less baggage. I envision using three terms, in complementary ways, to reduce terminology-related tensions: profession; professionalism; and public service professionalism.
A solution to the tension associated with terminology is to change the rhetoric (Green, Keller, and Wamsley Reference Green, Keller and Wamsley1993) and move toward more broadly accepted labels that carry less baggage. I envision using three terms, in complementary ways, to reduce terminology-related tensions: profession; professionalism; and public service professionalism.
Profession
Profession is the term that carries the specialized meaning long associated with sociological study of professions. It represents a particular but widespread form of social stratification, that is, social structure that is an undeniable influence in public organizations and policy. Although public administration scholars have been critical of aspects of what professions represent, such as the tendency for professions to seek autonomy in applying specialized knowledge, the normative implications of the concept for public administration can be mitigated without abandoning its study in public administration.
Professionalism
Professionalism is the conduct and qualities of a professional. Professionalism is behavioral and includes conduct involving not only the use of specialized knowledge, but also competence, honesty and integrity, accountability, and self-regulation.
Public service professionalism
This term encompasses behaving in ways compatible with both the standards of the specialized expertise of a profession and norms dictated by the action contexts in which an individual is embedded. Professionalism is the general conduct and qualities of a professional, whereas public service professionalism is specific to particular public service roles such as city manager or environmental engineer.
Concept Dimensionality
The terminology I propose above implies at least a duality to the study and practice of professionalism in public administration. The duality to which I refer is the instrumental/normative distinction so common in the public administration literature. Green, Keller, and Wamsley (1993, 516), for example, contend that our attention to professionalism is impoverished because we have cast our intellectual attention to instrumental and descriptive facets of professionalism (how things are done) and ignored its normative dimension (determining what must be done).
To more accurately and meaningfully interpret public service professionalism, the instrumental/normative duality cannot represent an either-or choice. Instead, our attention to professionalism must simultaneously include instrumental and normative dimensions. In many ways, the professionalism focus helps to answer the question about “the place of normative values” raised by Robert Dahl (Reference Dahl1947). Dahl’s exhortation was:
The student of public administration cannot avoid a concern with ends. What he ought to avoid is the failure to make explicit the ends or values that form the groundwork of his doctrine. If purposes and normative considerations were consistently made plain, a net gain to the science of public administration would result (3).
This focus on normative values brought a new dimension to public administration scholarship. Wright (Reference Wright2015) argued, in his review of the aftermath of Dahl’s (1947) assessment of public administration as a science, that scholars have made demonstrable progress acknowledging and studying values. Among the recent research publications that led Wright to his conclusion are Brown, Potoski, and Van Slyke (Reference Brown, Potoski and Van Slyke2006), Rosenbloom (Reference Rosenbloom2007), Nabatchi (Reference Nabatchi2012), and Moynihan et al. (Reference Moynihan, Fernandez, Kim, LeRoux, Piotrowski, Wright and Yang2011). Footnote 3
Multi-level Units of Analysis
Within public administration scholarship, we already have several multi-level frameworks that could provide the analytic foundation for what I propose. For example, two frameworks are particularly consistent with the spirit of the proposal: the institutional analysis and development framework (IAD) and the “new-logic model” for governance research (Lynn, Heinrich, and Hill Reference Lynn, Heinrich and Hill2001).
The appropriateness of the IAD framework derives from its three distinct, nested “worlds of action” (Bekke, Perry, and Toonen Reference Bekke, Perry and Toonen1996; Kiser and Ostrom Reference Kiser, Ostrom and Ostrom1982). These three worlds of action—namely constitutional, collective choice, and operational—mirror analytic distinctions that have long been deemed consequential in the public professions literature. Green et al. (Reference Green, Keller and Wamsley1993), for example, distinguish among professional, constitutive, and normative competence, a three-way distinction that is compatible with the operational (i.e., professional), collective choice (i.e., constitutive), and constitutional (i.e., normative) worlds of action. The correspondence between Green et al. (Reference Green, Keller and Wamsley1993) and the IAD framework is strong and therefore could be fruitful for advancing calls for integrating public administration and political science research (Amsler Reference Amsler2016).
In contrast, the new-logic model proposed by Lynn, Heinrich, and Hill (Reference Lynn, Heinrich and Hill2001) rests on a research strategy for studying governance rather than an explicit nested model. They define governance “as regimes of laws, rules, judicial decisions, and administrative practices that constrain, prescribe, and enable the provision of publicly supported goods and services” (Lynn, Heinrich, and Hill Reference Lynn, Heinrich and Hill2001, 7). As I have previously articulated, the intent of their framework is to promote:
studies that develop theory-based, multi-component models that are empirically verifiable, that define and operationalize concepts, and that present appropriately framed findings … [the] model flows hierarchically…from the global/national/cultural environment, to the institutional level, to the managerial level, to the technical level, to political assessment (Perry Reference Perry2002, 744).
Although Lynn, Heinrich, and Hill do not mention the IAD framework, they explicitly acknowledge their debt to mainstream social scientists such as Talcott Parsons and James D. Thompson, further establishing the link between public administration and social science.
Plural in Contrast to Universal
Public administration scholars who have written about professionalism are critical of the simplicity of extant approaches, but the alternatives they propose are themselves simplistic. They have tried to define a universal professional framework for a public administration “class.” The “universal” position is transparent, for example, in the title of Green, Keller, and Wamsley’s (Reference Green, Keller and Wamsley1993) article, “Reconstituting A Profession” (emphasis added). Although there may be universals, such as constitution-level rules that prescribe professional behavior or professionalism, the diversity of the public sector suggests professional direction is likely to take plural forms.
Take, for example, the role of city manager, one of the more highly developed and self-conscious professions in government, established at the height of the Progressive era. City managers are subject to the same constitutional rules as virtually everyone else across the US public sector. However, they are also subject to some peculiar rules, such as the International City/County Management (ICMA) Code of Ethics and local ordinances and state statutes that govern choice processes within the jurisdictions in which they serve. These distinctions, together with the knowledge and skill repertoire necessary to serve as an effective chief operating officer, differentiates what constitutes both professionalism and public service professionalism for city managers from what these terms mean for other state or federal employees, even those occupying chief operating officer roles in other public organizations.
The city manager example helps to make another point about the need to model professionalism in plural rather than universal terms. ICMA is a membership organization that represents city managers in countries around the world (Berman Reference Berman2017). Although city managers subscribe to some universals, like their code of ethics, they must also adhere to a variety of rules inherent in the country situations in which they are embedded. Thus, even city managers reflect a plural professionalism. Models that accommodate plural conceptions of professionalism are also better suited to building global, rather than particularistic, public administration knowledge (Perry Reference Perry2016).
WHAT DIFFERENCE MIGHT THE PROPOSAL MAKE FOR PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION?
I can envision a variety of advantages if public administration took professionalism seriously. My vantage point and preferences, no doubt, may lead me to overstate benefits, but using professionalism to frame the field can pay off for research and practice. A robust standing for professionalism as a frame could help to realize the aspirations of people like John Gaus and pull together disparate threads long unconnected within the field. Here I briefly discuss three benefits the field could reap by being more attentive to the professionalism agenda: reaffirming public administration’s identity, contextualizing important aspects of public administration theory and research, and integrating disparate research streams.
Dwight Waldo’s (1968) original reason for proposing that public administration adopt a “professional perspective” was related to what he perceived as a crisis of identity that began in the aftermath of World War II and continued into the 1960s.
Reaffirming Public Administration’s Identity
Dwight Waldo’s (1968) original reason for proposing that public administration adopt a “professional perspective” was related to what he perceived as a crisis of identity that began in the aftermath of World War II and continued into the 1960s. Becoming professional for Waldo was a better direction for the field than staying a sub-discipline of political science or becoming a discipline unto itself. Waldo (Reference Waldo and Charlesworth1968) wrote in justification of his proposal:
The professional perspective or stance is the only one broad and flexible enough to enable us to contain our diverse interests and objectives, yet firm and understandable enough to provide some unity and sense of direction and purpose. It has meaning and contains useful cues and imperatives both in the academic world in which public administration is studied and in the governmental world in which public administration is practiced (10).
Three factors underlie my view that professionalism will contribute to strengthening public administration’s identity. First, public administration’s identity is historically embedded in the language and logics of professions and professionalism. Reading classic contributions from Gaus (Reference Gaus, Gaus, White and Dimock1936; Reference Gaus1947; Reference Gaus1950) and Wilson (Reference Wilson1887) affirms that the development of public administration professionally was a valued goal within the reform movement.
Second, governments, quasi-governments, and public servants need usable knowledge to advance their missions (Perry Reference Perry2012a; Reference Perry2013; Radin Reference Radin2013). The creation and acquisition of usable knowledge relies on the alignment of our understanding of public administration with its broad social purpose. Characterizing public service as a profession, as represented by an analogy to medicine, is the frame that Waldo (1968, 10) and I (Perry Reference Perry2012b) see as most promising for positioning the field to produce usable knowledge. The medical analogy reminds us that public administration is a practical enterprise that seeks to better the public sphere by drawing upon the physical, social, and behavioral sciences. At the same time, public administration professionals must understand and navigate the extra-cognitive aspects of public administration—judgment, skill, and values—that are central to our modern understanding of profession (Sullivan Reference Sullivan2005).
Third, the professional identity I am proposing is instrumental for the effective engagement of scholars and practitioners seeking to support public service. A good deal has been written about discontinuities between the academy and the world of practice, both in public administration specifically (Milward et al. Reference Milward, Jensen, Roberts, Dussauge-Laguna, Junjan, Torenvlied, Boin, Colebatch, Kettl and Durant2016; Perry Reference Perry2017; Volcker Reference Volcker2014) and the social sciences generally (Davis Reference Davis2015; Lindblom and Cohen Reference Lindblom and Cohen1979; Watts Reference Watts2017). The “blame” for the academy-practice divide has been assigned to many factors, among them the incentives within academe and increasing specialization that distances modern research from most practitioners. I have no doubt that whatever the determinants for the two, non-intersecting worlds (Buick et al. Reference Buick, Blackman, O’Flynn, O’Donnell and West2016; Newman, Cherney, and Head Reference Newman, Cherney and Head2016), more interaction between the communities is necessary to develop action in concert across the communities.
The professional perspective gives us our best chance for bringing the communities together because it “has meaning and contains useful cues and imperatives both in the academic world in which public administration is studied and in the governmental world in which public administration is practiced” (Waldo Reference Waldo and Charlesworth1968, 10). A professional perspective could serve to remind scholars and professionals—and the organizations they inhabit—of the bonds between the two communities that John Gaus wrote about in 1936, which I quoted earlier. Gaus’s message in “The Responsibility of Public Administration” (Reference Gaus, Gaus, White and Dimock1936, 41–42) was implicitly about mutual responsibility. He wrote of public servants and their professional organizations working closely with university staff and research organizations to improve the quality of administration. His reference to introducing “research, inquiry, and self-examination into the day-to-day life of the public servant” (Gaus Reference Gaus, Gaus, White and Dimock1936, 41-42) suggests he had in mind not only instrumental aspects of public administration but normative values, too.
We may have an alternative to embracing professionalism, but I am not aware of it. Professionalism brings greater coherence to the unique nature of public administration. In its absence, the field is inchoate. Everyone with an interest in or commitment to public administration does not have to embody all facets of this professional identity, but to the extent that we can build a common understanding, I believe we each can more effectively contribute to a common end, which is the betterment of governance for the public interest (Bozeman Reference Bozeman2007).
Contextualizing the Study and Analysis of Values
Although public administration research has become more specialized since John Gaus’s era (Ni, Sugimoto, and Robbin Reference Ni, Sugimoto and Robbin2017), scholars have been slow to move from research models and assumptions that presume public organizations are populated with public administration generalists to realistic assumptions about public administration’s context and complexity. Footnote 4 A robust research program about professionalism in public administration could help to contextualize existing research streams that would benefit from the new knowledge. Two such research areas are public service motivation and street-level bureaucracy.
Public service motivation
When I initiated my research about public service motivation in the early 1990s, I envisioned important intersections between research about public service motivation and professionalism (Perry Reference Perry1997). In the first study of the antecedents of public service motivation, I wrote:
Professions historically have been a repository for public service values. The professions of medicine, law, and the clergy advanced such social norms as caring, social justice, and the common good. Many of these values took root in public administration with creation of the city management plan and the evolution of public service professions (185).
Despite the fact that public administration was home to polity professions (Stever Reference Stever1987), professionalism was perceived as having another side that made it a double-edged sword (Willbern Reference Willbern1954). Disadvantages were tendencies for professional loyalty to displace loyalty to larger portions of the population and for professionals to pursue insulation from political control. Thus, I expected that the degree to which professionalism influenced public service motivation was likely to be constrained by tension between professional self-interest and the ideal of professional responsibility to higher ethical and moral standards.
The results of my analysis of public service motivation and professionalism in 1997 were surprising. I found no significant overall relationship between the two constructs, a negative relationship between professionalism and attraction to public policy making, and positive relationships between professionalism and both civic duty and self-sacrifice. The potential ties between professionalism and public service motivation appeared to be every bit as complex as the literature projected.
Although the professionalism–public service motivation relationship has received additional attention over the years, the amount of research has been modest and much of it has been conducted in Denmark. In a multi-methods study, Andersen (Reference Andersen2009) investigated how professional norms, public-service motivation and economic incentives affected behavior and performance among a sample of Danish dentists, general practitioners, and orthopedic surgeons. She found that public service motivation, measured using a small sample of semi-structured interviews that she acknowledged as a limitation of the research, was uniformly high among the professions she studied, negating its ability to explain variations in behavior and performance. A recent study in Denmark (Andersen and Pedersen Reference Andersen and Pedersen2012) concluded that the professionalism–public service motivation relationship was more complex than scholars earlier supposed, affirming inferences from my 1997 study. They found that professionalism was negatively related to compassion and user orientation, positively related to attraction to policy making, and not related to commitment to the public interest. A related Danish study (Andersen and Serritzlew Reference Andersen and Serritzlew2012) exploring a single dimension of public service motivation—commitment to the public interest—found that physiotherapists with higher scores served a higher proportion of disabled patients, for whom services were less lucrative and who were seen as more needy. The authors inferred that physiotherapists serving a higher proportion of disabled patients perceived themselves as making greater contributions to society.
Results from such studies of public service motivation and professionalism are intriguing, but underdeveloped. They might help us to penetrate the veil between the professions and important values such as accountability and democratic responsiveness. More research about public service motivation using professions as the nexus would also extend our understanding of the context for public service motivation.
Street-level bureaucracy
Another line of research that has received steady attention in public administration since it first appeared is street-level bureaucracy (Lipsky Reference Lipsky1980; Maynard-Moody and Musheno Reference Maynard-Moody and Musheno2003). In Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Services, Lipsky (Reference Lipsky1980) presented a case for understanding how public service workers influence policy implementation. The term “street-level bureaucrats” was used to describe front-line workers in public-facing bureaucracies, such as teachers, judges, police officers, health workers, and social workers. Lipsky (Reference Lipsky2010) made two claims about street-level bureaucrats:
The first was that the exercise of discretion was a critical dimension of much of the work of teachers, social workers, police officers, and other public workers who regularly interact with citizens in the course of their jobs. Further, the jobs typically could not be performed according to the highest standards of decision making in the various fields because street-level workers lacked the time, information, or other resources necessary to respond properly to the individual case (Lipsky Reference Lipsky2010, xi).
Lipsky’s observations make the potential intersections between research on street-level bureaucrats and professionalism immediately apparent. Discretion and autonomy are common to the literatures on street-level bureaucrats and professions. The occupational contexts overlap. Teachers, police officers, legal workers, and social workers are identifiable in both streams of research.
It is surprising that more advantage has not been taken of the intersections as a means for accumulating a deeper knowledge base. A recent study of social workers (Evans Reference Evans2010) lauds Lipsky’s analysis for its insights into worker discretion, but is simultaneously critical of his limited attention to professionalism. Evans correctly notes that professional status influences both the extent of discretion that an occupational group exercises and the values that inform its use of discretion. Evans’ contention is that these social structures and rules deserve to be included in analysis of the behavior of street-level bureaucrats. To date, however, they have not received the attention they deserve. Using research on professions to contextualize the study of street-level bureaucracy is a move to remedy this important gap in research.
Integrating prominent research streams
A third difference a vigorous program of research on professionalism could make is to help integrate disparate lines of research. Two examples of research streams that could be more effectively integrated through attention to public service professionalism are public values research and regime legitimacy research.
Public values research
Research about values in public administration has figured prominently in the field since the 1940s. Herbert Simon (Reference Simon1946) and Robert Dahl (Reference Dahl1947) ignited controversy about values that echoes to this day. My proposal puts values at the center of the field in ways that address issues first raised by these scholars (Dahl Reference Dahl1947; Meier Reference Meier2015; Simon Reference Simon1946; Wright Reference Wright2015). As noted above, scholars have made demonstrable progress acknowledging and studying values. More research that self-consciously considered professionalism could advance this knowledge meaningfully.
The most recent manifestation of the values debate within public administration involves several competing lines of research summarized by Bryson, Crosby, and Bloomberg (Reference Bryson, Crosby and Bloomberg2014). They identify three streams of research identified with Moore (Reference Moore2014), Bozeman (Reference Bozeman2007), Jørgensen and Bozeman (Reference Jørgensen and Bozeman2007), and Meynhardt (Reference Meynhardt2009). My informal communications with colleagues reveal that the differences among these lines of research can be perceived as a cacophony. A vigorous program of research on professionalism could shed light on the relative merits of these competing lines of research. Such a program would also go a long way in grounding the debate in realities of life in public organizations.
Regime legitimacy research
An arena that represents a connection between political science and public administration in the finest tradition of John Gaus is research on regime legitimacy. Lipset (Reference Lipset1981) defines regime legitimacy as “the capacity of the system to engender and maintain the belief that the existing political institutions are the most appropriate ones for the society” (84). Research on professionalism that includes issues such as professional values, norms and behavior offers prospects for bringing together research on regime legitimacy with research on public service motivation, public values, and public ethics.
Attraction to public-policy making (Perry Reference Perry1996b) or attraction to public service (Kim et al. Reference Kim, Vandenabeele, Wright, Andersen, Cerase, Christensen, Desmarais, Koumenta, Leisink, Liu, Palidauskaite, Pedersen, Perry, Ritz, Taylor and De Vivo2013), one of four dimensions of public service motivation, captures an individual’s disposition toward the governance regime. Footnote 5 The attraction-to-public-policy-making subscale began as an effort to create an institutional dimension (Perry Reference Perry1996b; Perry and Wise Reference Perry and Wise1990) that tapped an individual’s commitment to the governance system in which he or she operated. Among the aspects of the relationship were (1) the extent of an individual’s loyalty to the governance system, (2) the individual’s belief that the system was legitimate, and (3) the extent to which the individual valued the system (Perry and Vandenabeele Reference Perry and Vandenabeele2015).
In their inventory of public values, Jørgensen and Bozeman (Reference Jørgensen and Bozeman2007) identified “regime loyalty” as one of the public values in the constellation of values associated with the behavior of public servants. They also emphasized the connection of regime loyalty and other values associated with it to integrity, which comports with the original notion that this dimension captured an individual’s loyalty to the institutions by which public decisions are made and executed.
The regime legitimacy concept also has ties with an important literature that pre-dates recent research on public service motivation and public values. John Rohr’s scholarship (1986) is most recently associated with regime legitimacy (Feldman Reference Feldman2015), but the issue can be traced to Frank Goodnow (Lynn Reference Lynn2009) and the origins of American public administration. Thus, research on professionalism could help to integrate not only relatively recent lines of research, but also foundational research. Research on professionalism could identify the contours of to whom professionals are loyal and how their behaviors are related to regime legitimacy.
FUTURE RESEARCH
Since the 1960s, when scholars followed Dwight Waldo’s lead to conceptualize public administration as a profession, knowledge accumulation has lagged because, in this instance, the perfect is the enemy of the good. Scholars contested the basis for moving forward around numerous issues including questions of appropriateness, identity, normative grounding, and conceptual meaningfulness.
My sense of the field, based on more than 40 years immersed in it and monitoring it closely for the last six years from a vantage point I shared with Dwight Waldo, is that public administration is ready to move forward with a professions agenda. Recent developments in the study of public administration, among them the renewal of a behavioral public administration movement (Grimmelikhuijsen et al. Reference Grimmelikhuijsen, Jilke, Olsen and Tummers2017), increased research capacity globally (Perry Reference Perry2016), and growing consensus about the centrality and nature of the field’s attention to values (Bryson, Crosby, and Bloomberg Reference Bryson, Crosby and Bloomberg2014; Denhardt and Denhardt Reference Denhardt and Denhardt2011; Reference Denhardt and Denhardt2015), establish a strong foundation for future progress. Scholars and practitioners should move forward expeditiously on a professionalism agenda to fill knowledge gaps, integrate disparate research streams, and affirm an identity that has fit the reality of public administration for nearly half a century, since Waldo broached the issue in 1968.
A variety of research questions could get the ball rolling, many of them grounded in my original call for papers in 2012 (Public Administration Review). They include:
Scholars and practitioners should move forward expeditiously on a professionalism agenda to fill knowledge gaps, integrate disparate research streams, and affirm an identity that has fit the reality of public administration for nearly half a century, since Waldo broached the issue in 1968.
1. Is there a public service professionalism? As Mosher (Reference Mosher1968) reminded us, government is crowded with professionals—lawyers, engineers, doctors, foresters, scientists—who are responsible for the public’s business. Is there a convergence in the values espoused by most public service professions? How does the normative order of public service professions converge? What are the obligations, the responsibilities, to which all public service professionals should be attentive? Is there a lowest common denominator? Is there a high standard to which all public service professionals should aspire?
Of course, research about this question can go beyond simply inquiring about the status of professions in government. The research could seek to conceptualize and measure public service professionalism. As my comments about the concept indicate, public service professionalism involves several types of competence, including technical or substantive competence, ethical competence (e.g., integrity), and values competence. Just as we sought to assess the incidence of public service motivation in the 1990s (e.g., Crewson Reference Crewson1997), so too should we be investigating the incidence of public service professionalism today.
2. What metrics can be developed to assess professionalism and public service professionalism? The literature on the importance of public values has grown significantly, but we have little agreement on how to define, identify, and prioritize such values (Bryson, Crosby, and Bloomberg Reference Bryson, Crosby and Bloomberg2014; Moynihan et al. Reference Moynihan, Fernandez, Kim, LeRoux, Piotrowski, Wright and Yang2011; Nabatchi Reference Nabatchi2012). Metrics to measure both professionalism and public service professionalism need to be developed to advance this agenda, including assessing the incidence of public service professionalism referred to in the first proposed research item. Footnote 6 Several scholars have suggested various metrics to help operationalize the way people in public administration conceive the field. Rosenbloom (Reference Rosenbloom2007), for example, faults the field for failing to protect and promote values such as individual rights, constitutional integrity, transparency, and the rule of law. He therefore proposes development of impact statements and scorecards to increase attention to democratic-constitutional values. Meynhardt (Reference Meynhardt, Bryson, Crosby and Bloomberg2015) proposes a theory-based scorecard to measure public value creation. These and other metrics should be pursued as ways to advance the professionalism agenda. A byproduct of doing so would be to strengthen other lines of research, such as public values research, in public administration.
3. Oaths, codes of conduct, and accreditation. The oath of the Athenian City State has been associated with Syracuse University’s Maxwell School, the first US public administration program, since its founding in 1924. The ICMA code of ethics is enforced as an embodiment of stewardship for good government in local governments around the globe. The American Society for Public Administration first adopted a code of ethics in 1984 (Svara Reference Svara2014). What do we know about the symbolic and instrumental value of such oaths and codes? Can we employ these codes and rules in systematic ways to improve the public standing and performance of public service professionals? Oaths and codes have rarely been studied in public administration, but they deserve attention (Monypenny Reference Monypenny1953). Accreditation, an evolving practice (Teodoro and Hughes Reference Teodoro and Hughes2012; McCabe, Ponomariov, and Estrada Reference McCabe, Ponomariov and Estrada2017), is another mechanism by which professional standards directly influence public services. Although accreditation is most commonly used in health care and education, it is diffusing even more widely as an accountability mechanism and deserves new scrutiny.
4. How can the professions and professionals be developed for public service? Professionalism as a research agenda highlights the divide between those who are educated within our public affairs and administration programs and those who serve in government and quasi-governmental organizations. The number of MPAs and MPPs that graduate each year and enter government is dwarfed by the number of new professionals graduating and entering government. The numbers of joint JD/MPA and similar joint degrees has grown over recent decades, but the proportion of total public affairs graduate degrees is still quite small. How suitable are our models of professional education for developing public service professionals? In what ways do models for professional development need to change? The need to extend the reach of development opportunities for public service may be the biggest challenge facing schools of public affairs and administration, universities, and membership organizations such as the Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs and Administration (NASPAA).
5. Does the idea of public service professionalism resonate internationally? The idea of and consciousness about professionalism in American public administration is, as illustrated throughout this essay, quite recent. If profession is relatively new to the American context, what is its status around the globe? Does public service professionalism have universal attributes or is it an example of American exceptionalism? Given the global reach of some professional organizations, like ASPA and ICMA, it is reasonable to expect that professionalism would resonate internationally.
CONCLUSION
My goal has been to articulate a case for renewing and strengthening attention within public administration to professions and professionalism. In the late 1960s, Mosher (Reference Mosher1968) and Waldo (Reference Waldo and Charlesworth1968) stimulated significant attention for professions and professionalism within public administration. The attention they brought to a professional identity for public administration was not entirely new, but rather continued themes embraced by John Gaus and others in the 1930s.
Although a number of scholars sought to establish a professional perspective based on Waldo’s exhortation, they were unable to establish consensus on a way forward. In this essay, I have proposed ideas for re-engaging professionalism and overcoming obstacles that impede such development. Among my suggestions is to adopt an alternative concept name, “public service professionalism,” to denote the uniqueness of the phenomenon in public service and to separate its study in public administration from limitations scholars associated with sociological meanings of profession. A second proposal, which addresses criticisms of “technical” professionalism and simultaneously acknowledges that public administration rests on a social contract, is for a two-pronged conceptualization of public service professionalism as both instrumental and normative. My third proposal argues for incorporating several levels of analysis, ranging from institutions to operations, into how we study, think about, and discern public service professionalism. Finally, I argue that public service professionalism is a plural phenomenon because of the variety associated with the complex institutional and structural arrangements in which public administrators are embedded.
Renewed attention to professionalism grounded in these proposals could pay significant dividends for the field. Public administration’s identity would be reaffirmed in ways that strengthen ties between scholars and practitioners. Research on professions and professionalism could also contextualize other important lines of research, including street-level bureaucracy and public service motivation. This renewed and strengthened scholarship would also serve to integrate disparate lines of research on topics such as public values and regime legitimacy. Ultimately, the field stands to gain substantial self-awareness, coherence, and interdisciplinary integration from attention to public service professionalism, and the time is right to take professionalism seriously.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My thanks to Hal Rainey and Steven Maynard-Moody for comments on an earlier draft of this essay. I am also grateful to Elisabeth Andrews for her editorial assistance and guidance.