“…There are currently two dominant ones in public sector performance management research. The first is contingency-based research, which starts from the view that performance management practices depend upon certain contextual circumstances, such as the complexity of processes or environmental uncertainty (see, for example, Cavalluzzo and Ittner, 2004;Van Dooren, 2005;Moynihan and Pandey, 2010;Speklé and Verbeeten, 2014;and Kroll, 2015, for a review on the link between managerial performance information use and organizational performance). The second one is neo-institutional sociology, which highlights how performance management practices have become taken for granted due to certain pressures, and how these practices contribute to habitual types of actions (see Modell, 2009, for a review).…”