Iron Cage or Paper Cage? The Interplay of Worker Characteristics and Organizational Policy in Shaping Unequal Responses to a Standardized Decision-Making Tool

Author:

Bosk Emily A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Rutgers University

Abstract

Abstract Studies are largely optimistic about the ability of standardized procedures to constrain decision-makers’ biases and produce more equitable results across fields. However, work that embraces standardization as an equalizing force stands in contrast to research on standardization and street-level bureaucrats, which asserts that standardized procedures are not self-actuating and cannot be understood apart from the environments in which they are used. I examine how frontline workers vary in their approach to an actuarial-based tool intended to standardize judgments. In a highly controlled decision-making environment, child welfare workers whose racial and sex characteristics afford them higher status report subverting the tool; conversely, workers in the same position whose ascriptive characteristics yield them lower status in terms of race and sex describe following the rules. In an environment where the same tool is adopted only ceremonially, all workers experience decision-making as unconstrained, regardless of their ascriptive characteristics. This work fills gaps in knowledge about how social status and organizational context intersect to affect rule abidance. Examining these dynamic relationships advances understanding of how organizations reproduce inequality and the limits and potential for standardization to transform social hierarchies.

Funder

National Science Foundation: Law and Social Sciences Division

The Doris Duke Fellowship for the Promotion of Child Wellbeing

Fahs-Beck Fund for Research and Experimentation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference45 articles.

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2. “What Counts? Quantification, Worker Judgement, and Divergence in Child Welfare Decision-Making.”;Bosk;Human Services Organizations: Management, Leadership & Governance,2018

3. “Reflections on Street-Level Bureaucracy: Past, Present, and Future.”;Brodkin;Public Administration Review,2012

4. “Reconsidering the Declining Significance of Race: Racial Differences in Early Career Wages.”;Cancio;American Sociological Review,1996

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