International Journal of Public Sector Performance Management
- Editor in Chief
- Prof. Leo Paul Dana
- ISSN online
- 1741-105X
- ISSN print
- 1741-1041
- 8 issues per year
- CiteScore 0.9 (2023)
IJPSPM fosters discussion on performance management in the public sector, with an emphasis on the implementation of performance management technologies. It acknowledges the complexity of public sector performance management as an interface between the values placed upon public sector activities and their implementation. This gap between what is desirable and what is feasible stands at the crossing of many public sector issues such as cultural and ideological processes as well as regulation and economic processes operating over different space-time scales.
Topics covered include
- Theory/practice of performance management
- Evaluation methods/practices, analyses of efficiency
- Performance benchmarking/measurement, organisational impact
- Performance information utilisation, organisational learning
- Output/outcome/quality indicator definitions
- Performance reward issues
- Visibilisation of performance, performance indicator efficiency
- Organisational paths of performance
- Link between values/cultures and performance management
- Performance measurement roles in transforming institutional settings
- Performance measurement/management/policy context relationships
- Leadership, accountability
- Innovation in public sector management
- Managing public infrastructure technology
- Public sector as venture capitalist/entrepreneur
Objectives
The objectives of IJPSPM are to share the latest advances that the field has to offer and to create a sustained dialogue between policy makers, government agencies, academic and research institutions and persons concerned with the complex role of performance management in the public sector.
The international dimension is emphasised in order to overcome cultural and national barriers. We promote comparative studies which, emphasising the importance of context, do not abandon the quest for theoretical explanations and generalisations, and which develop theories that are context-sensitive.
All methodologies, such as analytical, empirical, behavioural, survey and case studies are welcome.
Readership
IJPSPM's readership comprises academics, practitioners, policy makers, consultants and research students with an interest in research in the field of public sector performance management. The journal provides a vehicle to disseminate information and to learn from each other's work.
Contents
IJPSPM publishes original papers, review papers, case studies, conference reports, management reports, book reviews, notes, commentaries and news. Special Issues devoted to important topics in public sector performance management will occasionally be published.
Editor in Chief
- Dana, Leo Paul, Dalhousie University, Canada
(lp762359dal.ca)
Associate Editors
- Brahmi, Mohsen, IAE Southern Campus and FEM. S. University, Tunisia
- Šević, Željko, Universiti Utara Malaysia, Malaysia
- Turc, Emil, Université Aix-Marseille, France
Editorial Board Members
- Aziz, Miriam R., INSEEC Business School, France
- Baumard, Philippe, French National Conservatory of Arts and Crafts (CNAM), France
- Bedrani, Slimane, National Institute of Agronomy and Center of Applied Economics for Development (CREAD), Algeria
- Benoît, Bernard, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
- Bianchi, Piervito, University of Foggia, Italy
- Bouayad, Brahim, Cadi Ayyad University, Morocco
- Côme, Thierr, Université de Reims Champagne Ardennes, France
- Carassus, David, University of Pau and the Adour, France
- Cepiku, Denita, University of Rome “Tor Vergata”, Italy
- Cherif, Mondher, University of Sfax, Tunisia
- Drumaux, Anne, Brussels Free University, Belgium
- Emery, Yves, IDHEAP (Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration), Switzerland
- Eymeri-Douzans, Jean-Michel, Institute of Political Science, France
- Gagnon, Jacques, University of Sherbrooke, Canada
- Giauque, David, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
- Guenoun, Marcel, Université Paul-Cezanne Aix-Marseille III, France
- Gunardi, Ardi, Universitas Pasundan, Indonesia
- Halgand, Nathalie, University of Nantes, France
- Haouas, Ilham, University of Dubai, United Arab Emirates
- Hintea, Calin Emilian, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania
- Joshi, Manoj, Amity University, India
- Joyce, Paul, Nottingham Trent University, UK
- Kapur, Vijay, University of Delhi, India
- Kuhlmann, Sabine, German University of Administrative Sciences, Germany
- Kumar, Pawan, Lovely Professional University, India
- Leitão, João, University of Beira Interior & CEG-IST, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- Mazouz, Bachir, Québec University, Canada
- Mazzoleni, Alberto, University of Brescia, Italy
- Meneguzzo, Marco, University of Rome “Tor Vergata”, Italy
- Migliaccio, Guido, Università degli studi del Sannio, Italy
- Moinard, Christian, Audencia Nantes School of Management, France
- Ohkita, Kenichi, Aichi University, Japan
- Orange, Gérald, Rouen Graduate School of Management, France
- Padovani, Emanuele, University of Bologna, Italy
- Palalic, Ramo, Sultan Qaboos University, Oman
- Pasquier, Martial, IDHEAP (Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration), Switzerland
- Pavone, Pietro, University of Naples Federico II, Italy
- Pillania, Rajesh K., Management Development Institute Gurgaon, India
- Proctor, Tony, University of Chester, UK
- Proeller, Isabella, University of Potsdam, Germany
- Rocher, Sebastien, University of Poitiers, France
- Rochet, Claude, Institute for Public Management and Economic Development (IGPDE), France
- Salloum, Laura, TBS Business School, France
- Scorsone, Eric, Michigan State University, USA
- Sedjari, Ali, Université Mohamed V University, Morocco
- Talbot, Colin, University of Manchester, UK
- Tanaka, Hiraki, Shizuoka University of Art and Culture, Japan
- Van Dooren, Wouter, University of Antwerp, Belgium
- Villeneuve, Jean-Patrick, IDHEAP (Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration), Switzerland
- Wei, Liu, East China University of Politics and Law, China
A few essentials for publishing in this journal
- Submitted articles should not have been previously published or be currently under consideration for publication elsewhere.
- Conference papers may only be submitted if the paper has been completely re-written (more details available here) and the author has cleared any necessary permissions with the copyright owner if it has been previously copyrighted.
- Briefs and research notes are not published in this journal.
- All our articles go through a double-blind review process.
- All authors must declare they have read and agreed to the content of the submitted article. A full statement of our Ethical Guidelines for Authors (PDF) is available.
- There are no charges for publishing with Inderscience, unless you require your article to be Open Access (OA). You can find more information on OA here.
- All articles for this journal must be submitted using our online submissions system.
- View Author guidelines.
Submission process
Journal news
Cut me some cyberslack
29 October, 2024
Remote working and working from home have changed the daily routine for many people around the world allowing them to balance work and life in ways that were simply not possible with the conventional commuter-bracketed 9-to-5. However, a study in the International Journal of Public Sector Performance Management reveals that there is a growing problem, a habit among home-based workers known as "cyberslacking" where they use their normal paid working hours to carry out personal internet activities. Whether doom-scrolling through social media or messaging with family and friends, cyberslacking has, the study suggests, become a common distraction from their work for many home-workers. It could be that the rush to create a better work-life balance is actually now tipping the scales in a direction detrimental to the employers that rely on their workers to be diligent and fulfil their obligations in a timely, effective, and efficient manners. The focus of the work by Natasha Tageja and Vijit Chaturvedi of Amity University Noida in Uttar Pradesh and Deepika Mishra and Namita Rajput of the University of Delhi, India, is on the idea that stress, rather than procrastination tendencies or simple laziness, is fuelling this trend. The team used structural equation modelling to analyse surveys from 272 employees across three private information technology companies to see what patterns there might be linking job stress and cyberslacking [...]
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