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Actors and Intentions in the Dissemination of Robotic Process Automation in Social Work

Agneta Ranerup () and Lupita Svensson ()
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Agneta Ranerup: University of Gothenburg
Lupita Svensson: University of Lund

A chapter in Service Automation in the Public Sector, 2022, pp 129-146 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract Automated decision-making is prevalent in numerous areas of the public sector. Based on the results of a qualitative, event-based study of how robotic process automation (RPA) is discussed and implemented in social work in Sweden, two questions are answered in this paper: What actors, intentions and network formations appear in the dissemination of RPA in the management of applications for social assistance in Sweden? What are the key, sometimes conflicting, intentions from a social work and a general public sector perspective? A spectrum of national, municipal and local actors—including technologies such as e-applications and RPA—are actively involved in the dissemination. A few important intentions are, for example, promoting the use of RPA, saving time and resources and answering the issue of ‘why’ RPA should be implemented. From a social work perspective, a key consideration and conflict relates to the core of social work, especially regarding the intention of helping people to become self-supporting. The more general considerations are related to intentions about implementing RPA to improve efficiency and effectiveness, as well as caseworkers’ discretion in view of laws regulating automated decision-making. Future research should focus on the actual effects of RPA on efficiency and effectiveness and caseworkers’ discretion in view of new laws and longer experiences with RPA.

Keywords: Robotic process automation; Automated decision-making; Social work; Actor-network theory (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:prochp:978-3-030-92644-1_7

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-92644-1_7

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