2012
DOI: 10.4102/sajip.v38i2.1000
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Deploying culture as a defence against incompetence: The unconscious dynamics of public service work

Abstract: <strong>Orientation: </strong> The intractability of public service delivery and a polarised societal landscape heighten anxiety and reinforce a propensity for public service organisations to be used for defensive purposes.<p><strong>Research purpose:</strong> This article employs social defense theory to explore manifestations of anxiety and defense within South African public service organisations.</p><p><strong>Motivation for the study:</strong> Dominant… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In a fascinating article, Mnguni (2012) discusses the public service in South Africa in terms of psycho-social dynamics, especially that of 'social defence theory'. It is not enough to examine the factual and explicit, he argues; one must also pay attention to the unconscious and hidden aspects of poor service delivery (ibid:3).…”
Section: A Deficit Of Responsibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In a fascinating article, Mnguni (2012) discusses the public service in South Africa in terms of psycho-social dynamics, especially that of 'social defence theory'. It is not enough to examine the factual and explicit, he argues; one must also pay attention to the unconscious and hidden aspects of poor service delivery (ibid:3).…”
Section: A Deficit Of Responsibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This results in a distorted understanding of reality. Mnguni's (2012) main findings are that the deployment of ill-qualified party loyalists to key positions in the public service is perverse: it serves as a collective defense against the impossible aspects of the task at hand. The appointees, in turn, deploy organisational processes to defend against feelings of incompetence and the inevitability of failure.…”
Section: A Deficit Of Responsibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%