The Hidden Tier of Social Services: Frontline Workers' Provision of Informal Resources in the Public, Nonprofit, and Private Sectors

  • 1h 38m
  • Einat Lavee
  • Cambridge University Press
  • 2022

What do frontline social service providers do during client interactions when they lack adequate formal organizational resources to respond to clients' needs? To answer this question, this Element presents two large-scale qualitative studies of Israeli frontline providers of social services. Drawing on interviews of public-sector workers (Study 1, N=214), it introduces a widespread phenomenon, where the vast majority of frontline workers regularly provide a large range of informal personal resources (IFRs) to clients. Study 2 (N=84) then compares IFR provision between workers from the public, nonprofit and private sectors. The comparative analysis demonstrates how workers' rationale for providing personal resources to clients is shaped by particular role perceptions embedded in values, norms and behavioral expectations that vary by employment sector. The Element concludes by presenting ramifications of the phenomenon of IFR provision in terms of citizens' wellbeing, social inequality, gender relations and the future of work in public administration.

About the Author

Einat Lavee, University of Haifa, Israel

In this Book

  • Introduction
  • Discretion on the Front Line in Context
  • General Design for Exploring the Hidden Tier of Frontline Service Delivery—Qualitative Method
  • The Provision of Informal Resources in the Public Sector
  • Provision of Informal Resources—Sector Comparison
  • Implications of Informal Resources—Costs for Workers
  • Conclusions—Challenges in the Contemporary Provision of Social Services
  • Notes
  • References