E-participation Opportunities and the Ambiguous Role of Corruption: A Model of Municipal Responsiveness to Sociopolitical Factors

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

7-1-2019

Abstract

Municipalities ostensibly scale the ladder of e-participation improvement to gain legitimacy. However, research has not yet addressed how e-participation initiatives are affected by serious legitimacy concerns such as corruption. One municipal response to corruption is to use e-participation offerings as a remedial effort to gain citizen trust, but window-dressing strategies might also be used. In this article, the authors attempt to make sense of this ambiguity by hypothesizing that the effects of perceived corruption on e-participation offerings depend on the type of e-participation as well as the level of local social capital and local public accountability demand. Analysis of data from 104 municipal websites in South Africa between 2013 and 2017 reveals support for two moderation mechanisms: (1) a positive remedial response to corruption in the presence of strong social capital and (2) a negative avoidance response to corruption in the presence of high demand for accountability.

Identifier

85063588125 (Scopus)

Publication Title

Public Administration Review

External Full Text Location

https://doi.org/10.1111/puar.13049

e-ISSN

15406210

ISSN

00333352

First Page

601

Last Page

611

Issue

4

Volume

79

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