Los límites de la lealtad ideológica en la evaluación ciudadana del performance administrativo local

Authors

  • Benjamín González Rodríguez
  • Enrique Carreras Romero

Abstract

Articles increasingly consider public opinion as essential information for assessing the actions of local administrations. Recent research has demonstrated the existence of an empirical link between the perceived quality of local services and favorable behavioral intentions towards the heads of local government. Given that the scientific literature is also accumulating evidence on the relationship between ideology and political preferences, the purpose of this article is to determine what role ideology plays in the impact of perceived quality on political preferences; specifically whether ideology annuls or moderates such an impact and to what degree. As concepts of “perceived quality” and “behavioral intention” are causally linked constructs, structural equation methodology (SEM) was required to perform the analysis. The analysis verifies the spurious and moderation hypotheses, but the data rejects both and points to an unexpected explanatory mechanism. A survey conducted in nine locations in Valencia (Spain) has revealed the surprising role that ideology is playing in shaping the political will of citizens through the evaluation of services.

Keywords

services evaluation, hierarchical multidimensional scale, perceived quality, public opinion, structural equation models, invariance analysis, political ideology, local administration, political preference

Author Biographies

Benjamín González Rodríguez

Depto. de Sociología y Ciencia Política y de la Administración

Catedrático de Sociología

Enrique Carreras Romero

Profesor colaborador doctor de la Universidad San Pablo CEU de Madrid y director de la consultora “MQ. Medición de Calidad”.

Published

2011-11-09

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.