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A Study of the Relationship between Diversity Government teamwork and Social capital

Abstract
Enhancing national and corporate competitiveness in the trend of globalization has
been the commonly sought strategic vision for both the public and private sectors of
the 21st century. Management of human resource is one of the many important factors
that may result in a successful realization of the strategic vision. Providing a more
complex social function, which includes dealing with public affairs and providing
public property, public sector plays a whole different role than the economic
exchange of market performed by the private sectors (Baldwin,1987; Rainey,1983).
The multiple roles taken on by various government institutions necessitate them to be
simultaneously concerned with the practices of social fairness, responsibilities, and
justice while performing their routine functions of promoting employment rate,
economic development, social welfare and security policies etc. This results in a
working context different from that of private employees with its characteristic
diversified or even mutual-conflicting job goals which give rise to occasional
confronting situations. Characterized with its diversified differences of demography,
job nature and specialized expertise, government sectors have long been challenged in
the area of personnel management by the social capital impact suffered from the
conflicts and negative emotions exhibited by their team members.
Organization which based its development on the heroic single-handled or
self-content way of management will soon find itself struggling to survive in a
fast-changing and intensive competitive environment which emphasizes on teamwork
and strategic alliance. ¡§Social capital¡¨ is commonly known as a relative new concept
proposed in the wake of conventional manpower capital, organizational capital and
customer capital. It is regarded as an extremely important new alternative as an
intellectual capital to the organization in the net-economics. Simple defined as ¡§the
potential power of social connections,¡¨ the basic premise of ¡§social capital¡¨ is
founded on the consequential supposition that an individual or a team with better
interpersonal relationship network will better its chance to attain organizational goal
by mobilizing resources available in the organization. If, when mobilizing its team
members, governmental sectors adopt the concept of social capital, they can dissolve
obstacles of integrating cross-departmental human resources originated from
sectionalism. In short, governmental sector with good and established personal
network will succeed more easily in forming its team-based organization.
The long-held negative pubic impressions of perfunctory observance of routine
job, corruption and dysfunction, arrogance and carelessness presented by the
administrative system have recently worsened by a series of major events of public
engineering, such as the incident-ridden THSR. This indicates a bureaucracy that
seriously lacks of crisis consciousness and maneuverability as well as a deficiency of
courage to actively take on responsibility and flexible adoptability. Asides from those
practices stipulated specifically in law, there are some vague areas existing in the
legal margins. Confronted with this ambiguity, public servants are subjected to the
stress of having to make unnecessary personal choices (Zhan Jing-fen, 2001) that
keep mounting on in an unceasing sequence. To make things worse, their existing
stress is added by the pressure from the tedious work of governmental reengineering
program. As such, emotion management aiming at releasing stress and pressure is
currently gaining increasing attention from the public.
Intending to explain the correlation between the diversification of and conflicts in
the team-based organization of government institutions and the social capital, this
study will further explore how and what organization network, norms, trust,
recognition, and promise that team-based governmental organization can construct in
their application of personnel management strategy when faced with goal discrepancy,
negative emotions and trans-departmental conflicts. Hopefully, we may provide a
useful reference for various public sectors that set their minds on creating an
organization based on the culture of mutual trust, cooperation, co-existence and
shared-prosperity. Finally, a new culture of job recognition and value-directed attitude
of public servant will then transform into the core value of active public service.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:NSYSU/oai:NSYSU:etd-0213107-145937
Date13 February 2007
CreatorsTing, Shui-li
Contributorsnon3, none, none
PublisherNSYSU
Source SetsNSYSU Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive
LanguageCholon
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.lib.nsysu.edu.tw/ETD-db/ETD-search/view_etd?URN=etd-0213107-145937
Rightsrestricted, Copyright information available at source archive

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