Inequality in Street

Inequality in Street-Level Bureaucracy: Linguistic Analysis of Public Service Encounters

Inequality in Street-Level Bureaucracy

Project description

Objective
The project is about the research of spoken communication between public authorities and citizen:s. Two questions will be investigated: How does the spoken language of administrative employees influence the satisfaction of citizens? And what differences exist between conversations with people from different social groups?

Background
Public services are important to improve the quality of life and well-being of citizens and to reduce social inequalities. Public employees play a central role in shaping these services. In particular, face-to-face interactions on the phone or in person are important, for example, when answering questions or explaining hard-to-understand cover letters. Nevertheless, there is little scientific evidence on how public authorities communicate with citizen:s in such face-to-face interactions and how accurate citizen-centered communication can be.

Methods
In a first step, the project developed a taxonomy of spoken administrative language. For this purpose, expert interviews were conducted with government employees. An experimental study then showed that differences in spoken administrative language influence the satisfaction of citizens. Currently, a method is being developed to record and analyze direct communication between government employees and citizens.

Disciplines
Linguistics, Computational Linguistics, Public Administration, Political Science

Starting Date
May 2020

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Project partners

Municipality of Konstanz

Chamber of Skilled Crafts Konstanz

Municipality of Rottweil

Municipality of Gießen

City Office Durlach

Municipality of Fintel

Jobcenter Administrative District Mayen-Koblenz

Jobcenter Mannheim

Citizens' Service Office Municipality of Aschaffenburg

Municipality of Singen

Tax Office Singen

Social And Youth Welfare Office Karlsruhe

Municipality of Recklinghausen

Municipality of Tübingen

Municipality of Stuttgart

Jobcenter Berlin Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg

Jobcenter Berlin Lichtenberg

Literatur

Publications

Eckhard, S,, & Friedrich, L. (2024). Linguistic Features of Public Service Encounters: How Spoken Administrative Language Affects Citizen Satisfaction. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 34 (1): 122–35. https://doi.org/10.1093/jopart/muac052.

Eckhard, S., Friedrich, L., Hautli-Janisz, A., Mueden, V. & Espinoza, I. (2024). A Taxonomy of Administrative Language in Public Service Encounters. International Public Management Journal 27 (1): 60–75. https://doi.org/10.1080/10967494.2022.2075062.

Espinoza, I., Frenzel, S., Friedrich, L., Siskou, W., Eckhard, S., & Hautli-Janisz, A. (2024). PSE v1.0: The First Open Access Corpus of Public Service Encounters. Proceedings of the 2024 Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-COLING 2024)https://aclanthology.org/2024.lrec-main.1165/

Eckhard, S. Espinoza, I., Frenzel, S., Hautli-Janisz, A. & Siskou, W. (2023). Language and Power. Computational Analysis Can Help Us Understand Inequalities in Communication. In_equality Magazine:  Research Magazine of the Cluster of Excellence “The Politics of Inequality” at the University of Konstanz, 2023.

Eckhard, S., & Friedrich, L. (2022). Linguistic features of public service encounters: How spoken administrative language affects citizen satisfaction. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory.  https://academic.oup.com/jpart/advance-article/doi/10.1093/jopart/muac052/6891178

Siskou, W., Friedrich, L., Eckhard, S., Espinoza, I., & Hautli-Janisz, A. (2022). Measuring Plain Language in Public Service Encounters. Proceedings of the 2nd Workshop on Computational Linguistics for Political Text Analysis (CPSS-2022), 27-35. https://old.gscl.org/en/arbeitskreise/cpss/cpss-2022/workshop-proceedings-2022

Eckhard, S., Friedrich, L., Hautli-Janisz, A., Mueden, V., & Espinoza, I. (2022). A taxonomy of administrative language in public service encounters. International Public Management Journal, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/10967494.2022.2075062

Eckhard, S., Friedrich, L., Hautli-Janisz, A., Mueden, V., & Espinoza, I. (2022). Kommunikation ist alles - Wie gesprochene Verwaltungssprache die Bürgerzufriedenheit erhöhen kann. Behördenspiegel, 08/2022. https://issuu.com/behoerden_spiegel/docs/2022_august