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Installing management by objectives in a public agency: A comparison of black and white managers, supervisors, and professionals
Public Administration Review (1983)
  • M L Moore
  • Dow Scott, Loyola University Chicago
Abstract
This paper explores the prediction of King and Bass (1974) that black managers and supervisors maybe e more reluctant than whites to accept management programs such as management by objectives. Data were collected from 77 black and 61 white managers and professionals of the City of Detroit transportation system (D-DOT), after they had been involved with MBO for almost one year. Analyses of t-test results indicate that blacks assessed MBO as more helpful in their individual jobs and more positive for the organization than their white counterparts. Explanations derived from the racial demographics of the organization, the MBO installation, and characteristics of MBO as a management process in public agencies are given.
Publication Date
1983
Citation Information
M L Moore and Dow Scott. "Installing management by objectives in a public agency: A comparison of black and white managers, supervisors, and professionals" Public Administration Review Vol. 43 Iss. 2 (1983)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/dow_scott/7/