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Dive into the research topics where Simon Anderfuhren-Biget is active.

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Featured researches published by Simon Anderfuhren-Biget.


International Public Management Journal | 2010

Motivating Employees of the Public Sector: Does Public Service Motivation Matter?

Simon Anderfuhren-Biget; Frédéric Varone; David Giauque; Adrian Ritz

ABSTRACT This article analyzes if, and to what extent, the public service motivation (PSM) construct has an added value to explain work motivation in the public sector. In order to address the specificity of PSM when studying work motivation, the theoretical model underlying this empirical study compares PSM with two other explanatory factors: material incentives, such as performance-related pay, and team relations and support, such as recognition by superiors. This theoretical model is then tested with data collected in a national survey of 3,754 civil servants at the Swiss municipal level. Results of a structural equations model clearly show the relevance of PSM. They also provide evidence for the importance of socio-relational motivating factors, whereas material incentives play an anecdotal role.


International Review of Administrative Sciences | 2011

Putting public service motivation into context: a balance between universalism and particularism

David Giauque; Adrian Ritz; Frédéric Varone; Simon Anderfuhren-Biget; Christian Waldner

Research on Public Service Motivation (PSM) has increased enormously in the last 20 years. Besides the analysis of the antecedents of PSM and its impact on organizations and individuals, many open questions about the nature of PSM itself still remain. This article argues that the theoretical construct of PSM should be contextualized by integrating the political and administrative contexts of public servants when investigating their specific attitudes towards working in a public environment. It also challenges the efficacy of the classic four-dimensional structure of PSM when it is applied to a specific context. The findings of a confirmatory factor analysis from a dataset of 3754 employees of 279 Swiss municipalities support the appropriateness of contextualizing parts of the PSM construct. They also support the addition of an extra dimension called, according to previous research, Swiss democratic governance. With regard to our results, there is a need for further PSM research to set a definite measure of PSM, particularly in regard to the international diffusion of empirical research on PSM. Points for practitioners This study shows that public service motivation is a relevant construct for practitioners and may be used to better assess whether public agents are motivated by values or not. Nevertheless, it stresses also that the measurement of PSM must be adapted to the institutional context as well. Public managers interested in understanding better the degree to which their employees are motivated by public values must be aware that the measurement of this PSM construct has to be contextualized. In other words, PSM is also a function of the institutional environment in which organizations operate.


Review of Public Personnel Administration | 2013

Stress Perception in Public Organisations Expanding the Job Demands–Job Resources Model by Including Public Service Motivation

David Giauque; Simon Anderfuhren-Biget; Frédéric Varone

Although stress has been a longstanding issue in organizations and management studies, it has never been studied in relation to Public Service Motivation. This article therefore aims to integrate PSM into the job demands–job resources model of stress to determine whether PSM might contribute to stress in public organizations. Drawing on original data from a questionnaire in a Swiss municipality, this study unsurprisingly shows that “red tape” is an antecedent of stress perception, whereas satisfaction with organizational support, positive feedback, and recognition significantly decrease the level of perceived stress. Astonishingly, the empirical results show that PSM is positively and significantly related to stress perception. By increasing individuals’ expectations toward their jobs, PSM might thus contribute to increased pressure on public agents. Ultimately, this article investigates the “dark side” of PSM, which has been neglected by the literature thus far.


Public Personnel Management | 2013

HRM Practices, Intrinsic Motivators, and Organizational Performance in the Public Sector

David Giauque; Simon Anderfuhren-Biget; Frédéric Varone

This article aims to determine the impact of human resource management (HRM) practices on public service motivation (PSM) and organizational performance. Based on a survey of Swiss cantonal public employees (N = 3,131), this study shows that several HRM practices may be considered as organizational antecedents of PSM and strong predictors of perceived organizational performance. Fairness, job enrichment, individual appraisal, and professional development are HRM practices that are positively and significantly associated with PSM and perceived organizational performance. Moreover, these results suggest that HRM practices are stronger predictors than either PSM or organizational commitment when explaining the individual perception of organizational performance.


International Journal of Public Administration | 2012

Profiles of Public Service-Motivated Civil Servants: Evidence from a Multicultural Country

Simon Anderfuhren-Biget

This study analyses if and to what extent culture, associational membership, social trust, civic participation, and political ideology explain the PSM level of civil servants. On the basis of a representative sample of 3,754 municipal employees from the German- (79 percent) and the French-speaking (21 percent) parts of Switzerland, this study offers three striking pieces of empirical evidence. First, the social profile of the respondents is different for each PSM dimension: “Attraction to politics and policymaking” is mostly influenced by political participation and sympathy for political parties; “Commitment to the public interest ” by culture and social trust; “Compassion” by clear-cut political positioning; and “Self-Sacrifice ” by volunteering and religiosity. Second, socio-political variables add an important contribution to the explanation of the first three dimensions. And third, cultural belonging has an important effect on the level of PSM.


Review of Public Personnel Administration | 2014

From Leadership to Citizenship Behavior in Public Organizations When Values Matter

Adrian Ritz; David Giauque; Frédéric Varone; Simon Anderfuhren-Biget

After decades of management reforms in the public sector, questions on the impact of leadership behavior in public organizations have been attracting increasing attention. This article investigates the relationship between transformational leadership behavior and organizational citizenship behavior as one major extra-role outcome of transformational leadership. Referring to a growing body of research that shows the importance of public service values and employee identification in public administration research, we include public service motivation and organizational goal clarification as mediating variables in our analysis. Structural equation modeling is applied as the method of analysis for a sample of 569 public managers at the local level of Switzerland. The findings of our study support the assumed indirect relationship between leadership and employee behavior and emphasize the relevance of public service values when analyzing leadership behavior in public sector organizations.


International Journal of Human Resource Management | 2016

Stress and turnover intents in international organizations: social support and work–life balance as resources

David Giauque; Simon Anderfuhren-Biget; Frédéric Varone

Abstract This study investigates whether work opportunities have an impact on stress and the related turnover intentions of employees working in intergovernmental international organizations (IOs). It contextualizes the job resources and demands model within IOs’ specific work conditions. The empirical test is based on original data from a survey administered in four major organizations of the United Nations system. Results demonstrate that social work opportunities and work–life balance are organizational levers reducing stress and willingness to quit for employees who are facing red tape or the stresses of being an expatriate. In this context, the relationships between these work opportunities and turnover intention are partially mediated by stress. Contextualized HR management propositions are made to help organizations coping with these management challenges.


International Journal of Public Sector Performance Management | 2015

HRM practices sustaining PSM: when values congruency matters

David Giauque; Simon Anderfuhren-Biget; Frédéric Varone

This study aims at identifying the organisational antecedents of public service motivation (PSM). It focuses on human resources management (HRM) practices as one category of organisational factors that impact on PSM. Concretely, this research questions how intrinsic and extrinsic HRM practices are related to PSM and whether these relationships are direct or mediated by person-organisation (P-O) fit. The empirical findings are based on a survey of 6,885 civil servants working in Switzerland. Regression analyses highlight that intrinsic HRM practices are positively related to PSM, whereas extrinsic ones are negatively related to PSM. Furthermore, mediation tests shows that only the intrinsic HRM practices are mediated by PO fit. Thus, civil servants who value intrinsic work incentives maintain a high PSM level when they perceive congruence between their individual expectations and the values of their organisation.


Public Administration | 2012

Resigned but satisfied: the negative impact of public service motivation and red tape on work satisfaction

David Giauque; Adrian Ritz; Frédéric Varone; Simon Anderfuhren-Biget


Public Administration | 2014

POLICY ENVIRONMENT AND PUBLIC SERVICE MOTIVATION

Simon Anderfuhren-Biget; Frédéric Varone; David Giauque

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Claudio Bolzman

University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland

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