ScholarGate
Asistent
Process / pipelineImplementation and frontline behaviour studies

Street-Level Bureaucracy Analysis

Street-level bureaucracy analysis examines how frontline public employees — teachers, police officers, caseworkers, benefits clerks and nurses — exercise discretion when they deliver services directly to citizens. Coined by Michael Lipsky in his 1980 book Street-Level Bureaucracy, the approach argues that the decisions these workers make under conditions of scarce resources and conflicting demands effectively become public policy. The method studies how routines, coping strategies and informal rationing shape what citizens actually receive, often diverging from the policy written by legislators. Its goal is to explain the gap between policy as designed and policy as experienced at the counter.

Otevřít v MethodMindJiž brzyPoužijte, porovnejte, získejte návod
Nástroje a zdroje
Stáhnout prezentaci
Učte se a objevujte
VideoJiž brzy

Přečíst celou metodu

Pouze pro členy

Pro přečtení této sekce se přihlaste s bezplatným účtem.

Přihlásit se

Mapa metod

Okolí příbuzných metod — vyberte uzel, který chcete prozkoumat.

Zdroje

  1. Lipsky, M. (1980). Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Services. New York: Russell Sage Foundation. ISBN: 9780871545442

Jak citovat tuto stránku

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Street-Level Bureaucracy Analysis of Frontline Discretion. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/cs/public-administration/street-level-bureaucracy-analysis

Která metoda?

Postavte tuto metodu vedle jejích nejbližších příbuzných a čtěte je vedle sebe — knihovna položí knihy na stůl; volba je na vás.

Porovnat vedle sebe

Odkazuje sem

ScholarGateStreet-Level Bureaucracy Analysis (Street-Level Bureaucracy Analysis of Frontline Discretion). Získáno 2026-06-24 z https://scholargate.app/cs/public-administration/street-level-bureaucracy-analysis · Datová sada: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026