Policy Making Latin American Public Policy Review

Politicization of Street-Level Bureaucracy: Pressure in Its Various Forms

Authors
Keywords:
Bureaucracy, Politicization, Patronage, Policy issues, Polarization
Abstract
This article examines how politicians exert pressure on street-level bureaucrats to advance their interests, focusing on four main forms of politicization: patronage (loyalty-based appointments), policy issues (ideological disputes in public agendas), top-down pressures (direct interference and bureaucratic bashing), and bureaucrats running for office. Drawing on a literature review, the study encompasses national and international papers, particularly in polarized and populist contexts. We systematize these pressures, their various effects (e.g., reduced frontline collaboration, increased stress and public distrust, revolving doors), and mitigation strategies, summarized in a comprehensive table. Results highlight patronage's role in eroding meritocracy, policy conflicts' ambiguity undermining implementation, hierarchical pressures fostering dysfunctions during elections, and electoral candidacies promoting corporatist platforms. Mitigation includes limiting commissioned posts, enhancing transparency and citizen participation, strategic planning with neutrality training, and institutional reforms for bureaucratic independence. In conclusion, balancing political responsiveness with professional ethos is crucial for democratic governance and service quality, especially at street level.
Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Cover Image
Published
2026-04-15
Section
Analytics

How to Cite

Rocha, V., Almendra, L., & Lotta, G. (2026). Politicization of Street-Level Bureaucracy: Pressure in Its Various Forms. Policy Making – Latin American Public Policy Review, 1(1), 17-36. https://policymaking.lat/ojs/index.php/pmla/article/view/5

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.