The polyphony of deviance: the impact of deviant workplace behavior on digital transformation
Journal article, 2025

Purpose The purpose of this study is to explore the impact of deviant workplace behavior on digital transformation in the public sector. This contributes to the current literature on public sector digital transformation as well as to that of deviant workplace behavior in public sector contexts.
Design/methodology/approach The authors conduct a qualitative case study of a digital transformation initiative in a Swedish municipality.
Findings The authors identify three types of institutional drift related to digital transformation, i.e. decelerating digital transformation, maintaining infrastructural stability and accelerating digital transformation. The authors categorize mediators for said drift and theorize on the role of deviant workplace behavior as a strategic driver for digital transformation in public sector organizations.
Research limitations/implications With the study being a qualitative case study, it is limited in terms of generalizability and transferability. Through this study, the authors sensitize the notion of digital transformation and show how deviant behavior results in strategic polyphony. Future studies are informed through offering a new perspective to public sector digital transformation strategy.
Practical implications Practice should view deviant workplace behavior as simultaneously constructive and destructive in lieu of planned digital transformation, as well as see its presence as a potential sign of subpar prerequisites for digital transformation in the public sector.
Social implications. Through this study, deviant workplace behavior is highlighted as a source of strategic polyphony and hence an important aspect of public sector digital transformation strategy.
Originality/value Through being the first paper, to the best of the authors' knowledge, to apply the theory of institutional drift to digital transformation settings as well as identifying the impact of deviant workplace behavior on digital transformation, the study offers novel insights.

Author

Johan Magnusson

Informatics

University of Gothenburg

Fredrik Carlsson

University of Gothenburg

Marcus Rönnquist Matteby

University of Gothenburg

Pamela Ndanu Kisembo

University of Gothenburg

Davia Brazauskaite

University of Gothenburg

Transforming Government: People, Process and Policy

1750-6166 (ISSN)

Vol. 19 1 37-52

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Business Administration

Information Systems

DOI

10.1108/TG-09-2023-0144

More information

Latest update

12/3/2025