{"title":"职业高原研究中的公共服务在哪里?","authors":"Sean Darling","doi":"10.1111/capa.12576","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Over 40 years ago Ference et al. (<span>1977</span>) published the first study on career plateau which would guide scores of subsequent studies. The concept of career plateau was put forward as a counter point to the earlier proposition expressed in the “Peter Principle” (Peter & Hull, <span>1969</span>), which suggested promotion to the level of one's incompetence was a management norm. Causes of career plateau obviously exist beyond the Peter Principle and can include such things as the pyramidal structure of organizations (e.g. Ference et al., <span>1977</span>), life plateaus (e.g. Bardwick, <span>1986</span>) and discrimination in hiring and promotion based on a myriad of causes such as race (e.g. Jones et al., <span>2017</span>; Zschirnt & Ruedin, <span>2016</span>), gender (e.g. Davison & Burke, <span>2000</span>; Jones et al., <span>2017</span>; Koch et al., <span>2015</span>), disability (e.g. Jones et al., <span>2018</span>) and other forms of bias and favoritism (e.g. Darling & Cunningham, <span>2023</span>).</p><p>However, despite the significant research on career plateau, there is a lack of focus on the public sector. This article attempts to identify and explore this lack of focus and argue why this is important. Before doing so, it analyzes the existing empirical studies of career plateau, identifying the types of plateaus researched, the predominate methodological approaches to studying it, the established impacts on individuals who are career plateaued, and the recommended actions individuals and organizations can take in response to it. What follows puts forward the argument that understanding and responding to career plateau in the public service cannot rely on research taken from the private sector and concludes with suggestions for future research tailored to filling the public service career plateau research gap.</p><p>Despite the considerable volume of research on career plateau, there is a lack of focus on the public service. There are only a handful of career plateau studies focused solely on the core public service (e.g. Allen et al., <span>1998</span>; Allen et al., <span>1999</span>; Darling & Cunningham, <span>2022</span>, <span>2023</span>). Out of 72 studies included in the systematic review by Yang et al. (<span>2019</span>) only 5 (14%) involved samples taken exclusively from the core public service with Darling's (<span>2020</span>) systematic review revealing a similarly low number of 6.5% of the 46 studies focused on the core public service.</p><p>Darling (<span>2020</span>) explored the mix of sectors represented in the research. Out of all the studies for which it was possible to identify the sector of the sample population, 51% were private sector studies. A further 20% of the studies involved a mix of public and private sector organizations with most of these studies gathering the largest portion of their data from the private sector. Only one of these studies (McCleese & Eby, <span>2006</span>) controlled for industry type and did not find differences between the sectors in terms of the study outcomes. However, this was a single study focused on the moderating impact of role ambiguity on career plateau and the outcome measures of job satisfaction and commitment. A third category, comprising 21% of the studies, involved samples taken from what could be considered part of the broader public sector such as teachers, nurses, police, the military etc., including any groups of employees whose salaries are usually or predominately supported through public tax dollars (e.g. Burke & Mikkelsen, <span>2006</span>; Milstein & Bader, <span>1992</span>).</p><p>Darling (<span>2020</span>) argued that studies beyond the core public service should be treated distinctly from the core public sector for several reasons. The core civil service involves government organizations for which an elected official has control and accountability. The nurses, police officers, teachers etc. included in the studies of the broad public sector category operate at a considerable arm's length from elected official control. Further, the core public sector is generally subject to different forms of legislative and policy oversight impacting organizational structure and the nature of work. While organizational cultures may vary across government agencies, the overall nature and functioning of the organizations are more likely to be similar than compared to the private sector. Often, the broader publicly funded organizations have unique career models as argued by the authors of military studies of career plateau (Cheng & Su, <span>2013</span>; Helimen et al., <span>2008</span>).</p><p>The lack of focus on the public sector is concerning for several reasons. Some career plateau researchers (Lentz & Allen, <span>2009</span>; Rotondo & Perrewé, <span>2000</span>; Sylvia & Sylvia, <span>1986</span>) have pointed out that career plateau may be different in the public and private sectors. Applying the findings from the private sector to the public sector must be done with caution, as the literature has identified important differences across sectors (e.g. Ghobadian et al., <span>2007</span>; Perry & Wise, <span>1990</span>). The negative impacts associated with career plateau are likely to be greater in the public service because they are believed to be more common in the public sector (Sylvia & Sylvia, <span>1986</span>; Lemire et al., <span>1999</span>). Decreased public service employee commitment can impact the quality of public services and citizen satisfaction with public services (Wisniewski, <span>2001</span>) that could contribute to elevated citizen distrust in government (Vigoda-Gadot et al., <span>2012</span>). Finally, the public sector is more likely to be unionized. Darling (<span>2020</span>) found that union members are underrepresented in the existing plateau research with only a few studies (e.g. Allen et al., <span>1999</span>; Hofstetter & Cohen, <span>2014</span>) focused exclusively on union members. While teachers and police are often unionized and have been the focus of several studies, these professionals have differing work, organizational and professional practice considerations associated with their careers that other unionized employees may not share (Darling, <span>2020</span>).</p><p>Improving our understanding of career plateau in the public service requires exploring several questions. As argued in this note and elsewhere, public and private sectors are different, and the question has to be asked how these differences might impact the experience of career plateau? There are unique public service employee characteristics, such as public service motivation which might impact how employees experience career plateau. Combining measures of career plateau and public service motivation and linking them to outcomes such as job satisfaction, could reveal new insights. These insights could guide the recommended responses public servants can take when facing a career plateau as well as help guide government organizations assisting employees dealing with career plateaus.</p><p>As pointed out long ago in Ference et al. (<span>1977</span>), the pyramid structure of the organization inevitably leads to hierarchical plateau for most employees. However, content plateau is not inevitable. A useful question to specifically explore would be what are the perceptions and experience of content plateau in the public service? Government organizations involve hundreds of different work units, and the public service might be very well-equipped to battle content plateau by promoting shifting employment across organizations.</p><p>Governments involve external and internal networks. What role do government networks play with career plateau? Do external government networks create opportunities for government employees to interact with broader policy and practice communities resulting in a decreased likelihood of becoming plateaued? Or do these external networks create their own barriers promoting career plateau? Government networks include internal organizational networks, where more than one government department is required to work together to perform its role, such as cross-government teams established to complete environmental assessments. Job networks can be a key feature of some government positions where a specific organizational role is required to engage with other staff outside of their area, such as a divisional coordinator. Do these internal government networks contribute to career plateau or protect against it? Responses to career plateau might be tailored to different types of government networks.</p><p>How do the complex government systems and policies related to hiring and promotion interact with perceptions of career plateau and the impacts of being career plateaued? Governments often adopt policies enabling lateral movement for many reasons such as staff retention, job growth through stretch assignments, and acquisition of new skills and knowledge to promote engagement. However, these policies may be constrained by the requirement to follow the merit principle in hiring and promotion. A greater understanding of how career plateau interacts with governments hiring procedures and policies through surveys and interviews of staff determined to be plateaued using Milliman's (<span>1992</span>) scale will potentially enable opportunities to mitigate the negative impacts of career plateau.</p><p>Ference et al. (<span>1977</span>) pointed out that most organizations focus their human resource strategies and activities on employees other than “solid citizens” who are career plateaued and make up the bulk of the organization. It would be a fruitful to explore how public servants perceive organizational efforts to recognize and promote engagement amongst “solid citizen” employees. Do they perceive too much focus is made on “young leaders,” “star performers” and “innovators” at the expense of the “solid citizens” who are foundational to the success of the public service?</p><p>While government has some existing data (such as public sector employee surveys) that could help answer some questions, its value is limited. None of the surveys are designed to explore career plateau, with none of them using Milliman's scale to determine plateau status. Any questions regarding differences between plateaued and non-plateaued employees cannot be adequately explored using these sources. Research incorporating aspects of the employee surveys, especially some of the questions used, could be combined with concepts from career plateau research in new survey research designed using Milliman's screening tool and undertaken inside of government. It is difficult to gain access to this type of data outside of government for many reasons.</p><p>Our understanding of career plateau has progressed significantly since research on the subject began over 40 years ago. We now understand the negative impacts associated with career plateau as well as several ways to respond. What we require is a better understanding of how career plateau manifests in a government context if we are to take the lessons learned and make them work for the betterment of the public service.</p>","PeriodicalId":46145,"journal":{"name":"Canadian Public Administration-Administration Publique Du Canada","volume":"67 3","pages":"420-428"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/capa.12576","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Where is the Public Service in Career Plateau Research?\",\"authors\":\"Sean Darling\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/capa.12576\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Over 40 years ago Ference et al. (<span>1977</span>) published the first study on career plateau which would guide scores of subsequent studies. The concept of career plateau was put forward as a counter point to the earlier proposition expressed in the “Peter Principle” (Peter & Hull, <span>1969</span>), which suggested promotion to the level of one's incompetence was a management norm. Causes of career plateau obviously exist beyond the Peter Principle and can include such things as the pyramidal structure of organizations (e.g. Ference et al., <span>1977</span>), life plateaus (e.g. Bardwick, <span>1986</span>) and discrimination in hiring and promotion based on a myriad of causes such as race (e.g. Jones et al., <span>2017</span>; Zschirnt & Ruedin, <span>2016</span>), gender (e.g. Davison & Burke, <span>2000</span>; Jones et al., <span>2017</span>; Koch et al., <span>2015</span>), disability (e.g. Jones et al., <span>2018</span>) and other forms of bias and favoritism (e.g. Darling & Cunningham, <span>2023</span>).</p><p>However, despite the significant research on career plateau, there is a lack of focus on the public sector. This article attempts to identify and explore this lack of focus and argue why this is important. Before doing so, it analyzes the existing empirical studies of career plateau, identifying the types of plateaus researched, the predominate methodological approaches to studying it, the established impacts on individuals who are career plateaued, and the recommended actions individuals and organizations can take in response to it. What follows puts forward the argument that understanding and responding to career plateau in the public service cannot rely on research taken from the private sector and concludes with suggestions for future research tailored to filling the public service career plateau research gap.</p><p>Despite the considerable volume of research on career plateau, there is a lack of focus on the public service. There are only a handful of career plateau studies focused solely on the core public service (e.g. Allen et al., <span>1998</span>; Allen et al., <span>1999</span>; Darling & Cunningham, <span>2022</span>, <span>2023</span>). Out of 72 studies included in the systematic review by Yang et al. (<span>2019</span>) only 5 (14%) involved samples taken exclusively from the core public service with Darling's (<span>2020</span>) systematic review revealing a similarly low number of 6.5% of the 46 studies focused on the core public service.</p><p>Darling (<span>2020</span>) explored the mix of sectors represented in the research. Out of all the studies for which it was possible to identify the sector of the sample population, 51% were private sector studies. A further 20% of the studies involved a mix of public and private sector organizations with most of these studies gathering the largest portion of their data from the private sector. Only one of these studies (McCleese & Eby, <span>2006</span>) controlled for industry type and did not find differences between the sectors in terms of the study outcomes. However, this was a single study focused on the moderating impact of role ambiguity on career plateau and the outcome measures of job satisfaction and commitment. A third category, comprising 21% of the studies, involved samples taken from what could be considered part of the broader public sector such as teachers, nurses, police, the military etc., including any groups of employees whose salaries are usually or predominately supported through public tax dollars (e.g. Burke & Mikkelsen, <span>2006</span>; Milstein & Bader, <span>1992</span>).</p><p>Darling (<span>2020</span>) argued that studies beyond the core public service should be treated distinctly from the core public sector for several reasons. The core civil service involves government organizations for which an elected official has control and accountability. The nurses, police officers, teachers etc. included in the studies of the broad public sector category operate at a considerable arm's length from elected official control. Further, the core public sector is generally subject to different forms of legislative and policy oversight impacting organizational structure and the nature of work. While organizational cultures may vary across government agencies, the overall nature and functioning of the organizations are more likely to be similar than compared to the private sector. Often, the broader publicly funded organizations have unique career models as argued by the authors of military studies of career plateau (Cheng & Su, <span>2013</span>; Helimen et al., <span>2008</span>).</p><p>The lack of focus on the public sector is concerning for several reasons. Some career plateau researchers (Lentz & Allen, <span>2009</span>; Rotondo & Perrewé, <span>2000</span>; Sylvia & Sylvia, <span>1986</span>) have pointed out that career plateau may be different in the public and private sectors. Applying the findings from the private sector to the public sector must be done with caution, as the literature has identified important differences across sectors (e.g. Ghobadian et al., <span>2007</span>; Perry & Wise, <span>1990</span>). The negative impacts associated with career plateau are likely to be greater in the public service because they are believed to be more common in the public sector (Sylvia & Sylvia, <span>1986</span>; Lemire et al., <span>1999</span>). Decreased public service employee commitment can impact the quality of public services and citizen satisfaction with public services (Wisniewski, <span>2001</span>) that could contribute to elevated citizen distrust in government (Vigoda-Gadot et al., <span>2012</span>). Finally, the public sector is more likely to be unionized. Darling (<span>2020</span>) found that union members are underrepresented in the existing plateau research with only a few studies (e.g. Allen et al., <span>1999</span>; Hofstetter & Cohen, <span>2014</span>) focused exclusively on union members. While teachers and police are often unionized and have been the focus of several studies, these professionals have differing work, organizational and professional practice considerations associated with their careers that other unionized employees may not share (Darling, <span>2020</span>).</p><p>Improving our understanding of career plateau in the public service requires exploring several questions. As argued in this note and elsewhere, public and private sectors are different, and the question has to be asked how these differences might impact the experience of career plateau? There are unique public service employee characteristics, such as public service motivation which might impact how employees experience career plateau. Combining measures of career plateau and public service motivation and linking them to outcomes such as job satisfaction, could reveal new insights. These insights could guide the recommended responses public servants can take when facing a career plateau as well as help guide government organizations assisting employees dealing with career plateaus.</p><p>As pointed out long ago in Ference et al. (<span>1977</span>), the pyramid structure of the organization inevitably leads to hierarchical plateau for most employees. However, content plateau is not inevitable. A useful question to specifically explore would be what are the perceptions and experience of content plateau in the public service? Government organizations involve hundreds of different work units, and the public service might be very well-equipped to battle content plateau by promoting shifting employment across organizations.</p><p>Governments involve external and internal networks. What role do government networks play with career plateau? Do external government networks create opportunities for government employees to interact with broader policy and practice communities resulting in a decreased likelihood of becoming plateaued? Or do these external networks create their own barriers promoting career plateau? Government networks include internal organizational networks, where more than one government department is required to work together to perform its role, such as cross-government teams established to complete environmental assessments. Job networks can be a key feature of some government positions where a specific organizational role is required to engage with other staff outside of their area, such as a divisional coordinator. Do these internal government networks contribute to career plateau or protect against it? Responses to career plateau might be tailored to different types of government networks.</p><p>How do the complex government systems and policies related to hiring and promotion interact with perceptions of career plateau and the impacts of being career plateaued? Governments often adopt policies enabling lateral movement for many reasons such as staff retention, job growth through stretch assignments, and acquisition of new skills and knowledge to promote engagement. However, these policies may be constrained by the requirement to follow the merit principle in hiring and promotion. A greater understanding of how career plateau interacts with governments hiring procedures and policies through surveys and interviews of staff determined to be plateaued using Milliman's (<span>1992</span>) scale will potentially enable opportunities to mitigate the negative impacts of career plateau.</p><p>Ference et al. (<span>1977</span>) pointed out that most organizations focus their human resource strategies and activities on employees other than “solid citizens” who are career plateaued and make up the bulk of the organization. It would be a fruitful to explore how public servants perceive organizational efforts to recognize and promote engagement amongst “solid citizen” employees. Do they perceive too much focus is made on “young leaders,” “star performers” and “innovators” at the expense of the “solid citizens” who are foundational to the success of the public service?</p><p>While government has some existing data (such as public sector employee surveys) that could help answer some questions, its value is limited. None of the surveys are designed to explore career plateau, with none of them using Milliman's scale to determine plateau status. Any questions regarding differences between plateaued and non-plateaued employees cannot be adequately explored using these sources. Research incorporating aspects of the employee surveys, especially some of the questions used, could be combined with concepts from career plateau research in new survey research designed using Milliman's screening tool and undertaken inside of government. It is difficult to gain access to this type of data outside of government for many reasons.</p><p>Our understanding of career plateau has progressed significantly since research on the subject began over 40 years ago. We now understand the negative impacts associated with career plateau as well as several ways to respond. 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Where is the Public Service in Career Plateau Research?
Over 40 years ago Ference et al. (1977) published the first study on career plateau which would guide scores of subsequent studies. The concept of career plateau was put forward as a counter point to the earlier proposition expressed in the “Peter Principle” (Peter & Hull, 1969), which suggested promotion to the level of one's incompetence was a management norm. Causes of career plateau obviously exist beyond the Peter Principle and can include such things as the pyramidal structure of organizations (e.g. Ference et al., 1977), life plateaus (e.g. Bardwick, 1986) and discrimination in hiring and promotion based on a myriad of causes such as race (e.g. Jones et al., 2017; Zschirnt & Ruedin, 2016), gender (e.g. Davison & Burke, 2000; Jones et al., 2017; Koch et al., 2015), disability (e.g. Jones et al., 2018) and other forms of bias and favoritism (e.g. Darling & Cunningham, 2023).
However, despite the significant research on career plateau, there is a lack of focus on the public sector. This article attempts to identify and explore this lack of focus and argue why this is important. Before doing so, it analyzes the existing empirical studies of career plateau, identifying the types of plateaus researched, the predominate methodological approaches to studying it, the established impacts on individuals who are career plateaued, and the recommended actions individuals and organizations can take in response to it. What follows puts forward the argument that understanding and responding to career plateau in the public service cannot rely on research taken from the private sector and concludes with suggestions for future research tailored to filling the public service career plateau research gap.
Despite the considerable volume of research on career plateau, there is a lack of focus on the public service. There are only a handful of career plateau studies focused solely on the core public service (e.g. Allen et al., 1998; Allen et al., 1999; Darling & Cunningham, 2022, 2023). Out of 72 studies included in the systematic review by Yang et al. (2019) only 5 (14%) involved samples taken exclusively from the core public service with Darling's (2020) systematic review revealing a similarly low number of 6.5% of the 46 studies focused on the core public service.
Darling (2020) explored the mix of sectors represented in the research. Out of all the studies for which it was possible to identify the sector of the sample population, 51% were private sector studies. A further 20% of the studies involved a mix of public and private sector organizations with most of these studies gathering the largest portion of their data from the private sector. Only one of these studies (McCleese & Eby, 2006) controlled for industry type and did not find differences between the sectors in terms of the study outcomes. However, this was a single study focused on the moderating impact of role ambiguity on career plateau and the outcome measures of job satisfaction and commitment. A third category, comprising 21% of the studies, involved samples taken from what could be considered part of the broader public sector such as teachers, nurses, police, the military etc., including any groups of employees whose salaries are usually or predominately supported through public tax dollars (e.g. Burke & Mikkelsen, 2006; Milstein & Bader, 1992).
Darling (2020) argued that studies beyond the core public service should be treated distinctly from the core public sector for several reasons. The core civil service involves government organizations for which an elected official has control and accountability. The nurses, police officers, teachers etc. included in the studies of the broad public sector category operate at a considerable arm's length from elected official control. Further, the core public sector is generally subject to different forms of legislative and policy oversight impacting organizational structure and the nature of work. While organizational cultures may vary across government agencies, the overall nature and functioning of the organizations are more likely to be similar than compared to the private sector. Often, the broader publicly funded organizations have unique career models as argued by the authors of military studies of career plateau (Cheng & Su, 2013; Helimen et al., 2008).
The lack of focus on the public sector is concerning for several reasons. Some career plateau researchers (Lentz & Allen, 2009; Rotondo & Perrewé, 2000; Sylvia & Sylvia, 1986) have pointed out that career plateau may be different in the public and private sectors. Applying the findings from the private sector to the public sector must be done with caution, as the literature has identified important differences across sectors (e.g. Ghobadian et al., 2007; Perry & Wise, 1990). The negative impacts associated with career plateau are likely to be greater in the public service because they are believed to be more common in the public sector (Sylvia & Sylvia, 1986; Lemire et al., 1999). Decreased public service employee commitment can impact the quality of public services and citizen satisfaction with public services (Wisniewski, 2001) that could contribute to elevated citizen distrust in government (Vigoda-Gadot et al., 2012). Finally, the public sector is more likely to be unionized. Darling (2020) found that union members are underrepresented in the existing plateau research with only a few studies (e.g. Allen et al., 1999; Hofstetter & Cohen, 2014) focused exclusively on union members. While teachers and police are often unionized and have been the focus of several studies, these professionals have differing work, organizational and professional practice considerations associated with their careers that other unionized employees may not share (Darling, 2020).
Improving our understanding of career plateau in the public service requires exploring several questions. As argued in this note and elsewhere, public and private sectors are different, and the question has to be asked how these differences might impact the experience of career plateau? There are unique public service employee characteristics, such as public service motivation which might impact how employees experience career plateau. Combining measures of career plateau and public service motivation and linking them to outcomes such as job satisfaction, could reveal new insights. These insights could guide the recommended responses public servants can take when facing a career plateau as well as help guide government organizations assisting employees dealing with career plateaus.
As pointed out long ago in Ference et al. (1977), the pyramid structure of the organization inevitably leads to hierarchical plateau for most employees. However, content plateau is not inevitable. A useful question to specifically explore would be what are the perceptions and experience of content plateau in the public service? Government organizations involve hundreds of different work units, and the public service might be very well-equipped to battle content plateau by promoting shifting employment across organizations.
Governments involve external and internal networks. What role do government networks play with career plateau? Do external government networks create opportunities for government employees to interact with broader policy and practice communities resulting in a decreased likelihood of becoming plateaued? Or do these external networks create their own barriers promoting career plateau? Government networks include internal organizational networks, where more than one government department is required to work together to perform its role, such as cross-government teams established to complete environmental assessments. Job networks can be a key feature of some government positions where a specific organizational role is required to engage with other staff outside of their area, such as a divisional coordinator. Do these internal government networks contribute to career plateau or protect against it? Responses to career plateau might be tailored to different types of government networks.
How do the complex government systems and policies related to hiring and promotion interact with perceptions of career plateau and the impacts of being career plateaued? Governments often adopt policies enabling lateral movement for many reasons such as staff retention, job growth through stretch assignments, and acquisition of new skills and knowledge to promote engagement. However, these policies may be constrained by the requirement to follow the merit principle in hiring and promotion. A greater understanding of how career plateau interacts with governments hiring procedures and policies through surveys and interviews of staff determined to be plateaued using Milliman's (1992) scale will potentially enable opportunities to mitigate the negative impacts of career plateau.
Ference et al. (1977) pointed out that most organizations focus their human resource strategies and activities on employees other than “solid citizens” who are career plateaued and make up the bulk of the organization. It would be a fruitful to explore how public servants perceive organizational efforts to recognize and promote engagement amongst “solid citizen” employees. Do they perceive too much focus is made on “young leaders,” “star performers” and “innovators” at the expense of the “solid citizens” who are foundational to the success of the public service?
While government has some existing data (such as public sector employee surveys) that could help answer some questions, its value is limited. None of the surveys are designed to explore career plateau, with none of them using Milliman's scale to determine plateau status. Any questions regarding differences between plateaued and non-plateaued employees cannot be adequately explored using these sources. Research incorporating aspects of the employee surveys, especially some of the questions used, could be combined with concepts from career plateau research in new survey research designed using Milliman's screening tool and undertaken inside of government. It is difficult to gain access to this type of data outside of government for many reasons.
Our understanding of career plateau has progressed significantly since research on the subject began over 40 years ago. We now understand the negative impacts associated with career plateau as well as several ways to respond. What we require is a better understanding of how career plateau manifests in a government context if we are to take the lessons learned and make them work for the betterment of the public service.
期刊介绍:
Canadian Public Administration/Administration publique du Canada is the refereed scholarly publication of the Institute of Public Administration of Canada (IPAC). It covers executive, legislative, judicial and quasi-judicial functions at all three levels of Canadian government. Published quarterly, the journal focuses mainly on Canadian issues but also welcomes manuscripts which compare Canadian public sector institutions and practices with those in other countries or examine issues in other countries or international organizations which are of interest to the public administration community in Canada.