The context of this study is the nation-wide reform of local government in Finland, focusing on line
managers and their scope of agency. Our data comprise two large-scale surveys of 40 municipalities
in 2009 and 38 in 2011. The respondents were line managers from different levels of the hierarchy
and, for comparative purposes, staff from the same units. Resources and constraints of agency were
studied both in relation to the immediate work of the respondents and to the broader issues of
municipality reform. Broad-scale reforms proceed in stages that require different forms of agency. Predominantly,
a higher position in the hierarchy seemed to give better conditions for agency, but this was
not always the case. Notable were the high values for intrinsic rewards of work given by all groups,
indicating the existence of conditions that enable new cognitive and learning challenges to be met.
It seems that this potential was not actualized satisfactorily in the accomplishment of development
activities. The supervisor?s influence on the social climate of the units was evident in the longitudinal
setting. From the perspective of distributed agency, this result is highly significant when one considers
that the social environment is the immediate context of agency.
Author Biographies
Tuula Heiskanen, Work Research Centre, University of Tampere
Research Director, Docent
Esa Jokinen, Work Research Centre, University of Tampere