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Impression management observation in South African district municipalities through attribution theory lens.

dc.contributor.advisorPhesa, Masibulele.
dc.contributor.authorMgoyana, Sithandiwe.
dc.date.accessioned2024-04-23T12:07:52Z
dc.date.available2024-04-23T12:07:52Z
dc.date.created2023
dc.date.issued2023
dc.descriptionMasters Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.
dc.description.abstractDistrict municipalities play a crucial role in the local government as they have the mandate to provide services to the communities and capacitate and assist local municipalities in their jurisdiction for the provision of services delivery. Most South African district municipalities are struggling to fulfil the mandate of delivering services to the communities and this is evidenced by delivery protests for poor service delivery across South African communities. Inability to provide proper service delivery by most South African district municipalities causes them to get pressure from political opposition and the communities at large, hence they resort to partake in impression management. The mayor’s foreword is a narrative disclosure in the annual report that has no guideline in terms of what gets included in it. Management of municipalities have the discretion on what to include, which makes the mayor’s foreword open to manipulation, and as such, can be a place for employing impression management tactics. This study examined the presence of impression management tactics in the mayor’s foreword in the annual reports of South African district municipalities. The study followed the quantitative research method. Quantitative content analysis was used to analyse the mayor’s foreword contained in the annual reports of 34 district municipalities in South Africa. Data were extracted from the annual reports available on the websites of district municipalities. Impression management tactics, in the form of textual characteristics, were examined based on the length, use of passive voice, use of personal reference, use of positive tone, and observation of readability. The study revealed that district municipalities use impression management tactics in the mayor’s foreword. The study revealed that non-performing district municipalities have used a lot of personal references, and more passive voice than performing even though not significant, while performing have used significantly more positive tone than nonperforming district municipalities. The study revealed that performing district municipalities have lower readability scores than non-performing. Furthermore, there is no significant difference between performing and non-performing district municipalities on the length of the mayor’s foreword, use of passive voice, use of personal references and the readability score. The study brings new insights into the use of impression management tactics in the public sector, specifically in local government. It further extends the debate on impression management and self-attribution.
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.29086/10413/22962
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10413/22962
dc.language.isoen
dc.subject.otherRegion municipality.
dc.subject.otherAnnual report.
dc.subject.otherMayor’s preamble.
dc.subject.otherImpression administration.
dc.subject.otherAscription theory.
dc.titleImpression management observation in South African district municipalities through attribution theory lens.
dc.typeThesis
local.sdgSDG16

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