Footnote:
In: Public Administration Review, 75(1): 36-48, 2015
Nach Informationen von SSRN wurde die ursprüngliche Fassung des Dokuments 2015 erstellt
Description:
There is an increasing interest to study public administrations, public managers or citizens interactions with, and views towards government from a comparative perspective in order to put theories to test using cross-national surveys. However, this will only succeed if we adequately deal with the diverse ways respondents in different countries, and regions perceive, and respond to survey measures. In this article, we provide an examination of the concept of cross-national measurement equivalence in public management, and how to proceed in establishing equivalence. We examine two different methodologies that test, and correct for measurement non-equivalence, namely 1) multiple group confirmatory factor analysis, and 2) item response theory. These techniques are then used to test, and subsequently establish the cross-national measurement equivalence of two popular measurement constructs, citizen satisfaction with public services, and trust in public institutions. Results show how appropriately dealing with non-equivalence accounts for different forms of biases, which would otherwise stay undetected. In doing so, this article contributes to the methodological advancement in studying public administration beyond domestic borders