Niels Åkerstrøm Andersen
Professor
About
Rethinking Welfare Leadership Through Critical Diagnosis
Public administration and our entire rule-of-law-based welfare society are undergoing radical transformations. We have more political reforms than ever before, yet they often appear less well thought-out and more unmanageable than in the past. Through diagnostics of the present, my research seeks to bring the welfare state’s debates in line with the present and its conditions. I aim to identify the political within managerial practices when it is presented as self-evident, and to show how proposed solutions often jeopardize fundamental values. In solidarity with public leaders, including welfare leaders more broadly, I pose “impractical” questions to their practice, holding up a mirror so they can take action in the games in which they participate.
My research addresses questions such as:
– How does the pursuit of greater flexibility, interdisciplinarity, and operational openness paradoxically lead to administrations that cannot tolerate criticism?
– How does the pursuit of less bureaucracy result in attacks on rule-of-law principles and the weakening of citizens’ legal standing?
– How does the pursuit of more governance paradoxically lead to greater uncontrollability?
– How does rising complexity in public administration create a regime of provisionality, where decisions are kept open as long as possible out of fear of the chaos that commitment might bring?
Publications
See all publicationsOctober 2025
On the Recapturing of Possibilities Lost
Technology, Potentialisation and Psychotechnics
Go to publicationSeptember 2025
Det hypotetiske subjekt
Uddannelsesledelse til en åben fremtid
Hanne Knudsen
Niels Åkerstrøm Andersen, Professor
August 2025
A Pandemic of Possibilities
The Spread of Potentiality-seeking Organisations under Conditions of the COVID-19 Lockdown
Go to publication