Subject category:
Economics, Politics and Business Environment
Published by:
Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford
Version: 11 May 2023
Length: 14 pages
Data source: Field research
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Abstract
This is part of a case series. As the senior most civil servant in the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Mountain State, Jay Adan was required to approve any new recruits hired in the interior ministry. When he received a list of candidates recommended for vacant posts in the Mountain State Emergency Services, one of his ministry's departments, he suspected that the recruitment had not been meritocratic. His personal investigation suggested that the candidates chosen were unqualified, and that more candidates were being recruited than the number of actual vacancies. Patronage was a rampant issue in the region, and political leaders frequently used recruitment cycles to garner support among voters before elections. Adan believed it was likely that the minister of internal affairs was interfering with the recruitment to recommend individuals from his key constituencies in time for elections. Adan considered it unethical to approve a corrupt process, but explicitly rejecting the list could cost him his career and jeopardise the important projects he was working on. Running out of time and options, Adan needed to decide what to do.
Teaching and learning
This item is suitable for postgraduate and executive education courses.Time period
The events covered by this case took place in Nov-22.Geographical setting
Region:
World/global
Location:
Mountain State (fictitious)
Featured company
Ministry of Internal Affairs (fictitious)
Featured protagonist
- Jay Adan (male), Senior Civil Servant
About
Abstract
This is part of a case series. As the senior most civil servant in the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Mountain State, Jay Adan was required to approve any new recruits hired in the interior ministry. When he received a list of candidates recommended for vacant posts in the Mountain State Emergency Services, one of his ministry's departments, he suspected that the recruitment had not been meritocratic. His personal investigation suggested that the candidates chosen were unqualified, and that more candidates were being recruited than the number of actual vacancies. Patronage was a rampant issue in the region, and political leaders frequently used recruitment cycles to garner support among voters before elections. Adan believed it was likely that the minister of internal affairs was interfering with the recruitment to recommend individuals from his key constituencies in time for elections. Adan considered it unethical to approve a corrupt process, but explicitly rejecting the list could cost him his career and jeopardise the important projects he was working on. Running out of time and options, Adan needed to decide what to do.
Teaching and learning
This item is suitable for postgraduate and executive education courses.Settings
Time period
The events covered by this case took place in Nov-22.Geographical setting
Region:
World/global
Location:
Mountain State (fictitious)
Featured company
Ministry of Internal Affairs (fictitious)
Featured protagonist
- Jay Adan (male), Senior Civil Servant