The National Organizations Study a review and an extension emphasizing public-sector sites /
Abstract (Summary)
This dissertation reviews the literature on public-business comparisons.
The review highlights that while there has been a general movement toward
larger samples, the vast majority of these samples are from restricted populations,
a limitation on the ability to generalize beyond the sample. The literature review
also demonstrates that most public-business comparison research clusters around
five themes: defining publicness, organizational performance, organizational
structure, work-related attitudes and behaviors, and human resource management
practices. The dissertation presents several hypotheses that emerge from the
public-business comparison literature and then tests those hypotheses using data
from the National Organizations Study (NOS). The NOS data set provides 1) a
representative sample of U.S. workplaces, 2) a robust set of variables that allow
for cross-sector comparisons, and 3) opportunities for replication, extension, and
generalization. The hypotheses are analyzed first through a preliminary analysis
using difference of means t-test and then through a multivariate logistic
regression. The preliminary analysis generally supported the hypotheses in the
expected direction. However, when the variables were examined concurrently,
through logistic regression, the patterns of support for the hypotheses changed in
interesting ways, occasionally directly contradicting the findings in the preliminary
t-test analysis. Specifically, the logistic regression analysis correctly predicted the
sectoral status of 88.9 percent of the cases in the NOS data set. Finally, the
dissertation reviews the implications of these findings for future research.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Georgia
School Location:USA - Georgia
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:
ISBN:
Date of Publication: