In the realm of public administration, where the heartbeat of societal service resonates through the efforts of countless public sector workers, a pivotal question lingers: what truly motivates these everyday heroes to embrace their roles with commitment and passion? A groundbreaking study spanning Australia and New Zealand offers illuminating insights, spotlighting the intricate relationship between public service motivation (PSM) and the environmental factors that shape it.
Dr. Esme Franken, a Senior Lecturer at Edith Cowan University’s School of Business and Law, helmed this extensive research endeavor, which meticulously examined how public sector employees’ perceptions of their work environment profoundly influence their motivational states. The research hinges on the premise that the intrinsic drive to serve the public does not exist in isolation but is critically entwined with the conditions and organizational contexts in which these workers operate.
Understanding motivation in the public sector transcends simple assumptions of inherent altruism or duty-bound service. The study employed the circumplex model of affect (CMA), a sophisticated psychological framework that categorizes emotional states in a two-dimensional circular space defined by valence (pleasure-displeasure) and arousal (activation-deactivation) to decode the emotional substrates of motivation. By mapping PSM onto this model, the research reveals the nuanced psychological landscapes navigated by public servants.
What emerges is a compelling typology: four distinct profiles of public servants characterized by varying degrees of motivation and affective experiences. The majority (55%) are classified as “enacted,” embodying high PSM supported by positive affect and conducive work environments that seemingly foster a virtuous cycle of motivation and performance. A substantial minority falls into the “motivated and coping” category (27%), indicating resilience and sustained PSM amid challenges.
However, the narrative complicates with the identification of the “resigned” (14%) and “thwarted” (4%) profiles. These groups, despite possessing an innate motivation to serve, grapple with systemic impediments and unsupportive environments. The “thwarted” segment, in particular, exemplifies individuals who experience keen frustration and diminished job satisfaction, trapped by bureaucratic inertia and volatile organizational climates that stifle their ability to realize their public service aspirations.
The study’s nuanced findings disrupt the simplistic dichotomy of motivated versus unmotivated public servants by revealing how environmental variables mediate the expression and sustenance of PSM. Notably, high intrinsic motivation does not guarantee positive work experiences; the organizational context, managerial support, and systemic dynamics profoundly modulate employee well-being and commitment.
Compounding these insights, co-author Professor Ben Farr-Wharton underscores the critical role of managerial quality and organizational support in shaping employee well-being. His observations resonate with broader organizational psychology tenets, where toxic management and inflexible bureaucracies erode workforce morale disproportionately, often negating even the strongest personal motivations.
This investigation further contends that the public sector’s unique challenges—ranging from cyclical reforms, election-induced instability, and sustained change pressures—exacerbate motivational complexities. The data demonstrate that when motivated employees face persistent environmental constraints, psychological consequences such as self-blame and frustration arise, threatening not only individual wellness but organizational performance and service delivery.
Intriguingly, the research sheds light on the psychological plurality within the workforce, affirming that individuals experience a confluence of affective states simultaneously. This complexity demands a departure from one-size-fits-all models of occupational well-being and burnout, urging policymakers and administrators to devise tailored interventions that recognize diverse motivational profiles.
At its core, the study highlights an urgent imperative: to cultivate public sector workplaces that empower employees to actualize their intrinsic motivations through supportive structures and adaptive cultures. Mere recruitment of personnel with high PSM is insufficient; sustainable public service excellence necessitates environments where motivation can thrive unimpeded.
As public sector organizations grapple with persistent employee turnover and morale crises, these findings offer a timely roadmap. They advocate for systemic reforms that prioritize psychological safety, managerial competency, and adaptive organizational design, thereby harnessing the latent motivational energies of public servants to enhance community well-being.
This research marks a significant advance in understanding the interplay between individual psychology and organizational ecology in public service settings. By integrating sophisticated affective science frameworks with empirical survey data, Dr. Franken and colleagues provide a foundational lens through which to reimagine workforce engagement and retention strategy in essential public institutions.
The implications are profound for government agencies seeking to bolster employee satisfaction and public service efficacy amidst an era of unprecedented social and political change. By aligning operational conditions with the emotional and motivational realities of their workforce, public sector administrations can foster a more resilient, committed, and high-performing cadre of civil servants.
In conclusion, this pioneering study enriches the discourse on public service motivation, illustrating that to sustain the dedication of public servants, attention must extend beyond individual traits to the enabling or hindering spaces they inhabit. For societies reliant on the steadfast delivery of public goods, this nexus of motivation and environment is a critical frontier warranting continuous exploration and informed intervention.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Public Service Motivation and the Circumplex Model of Affect: Profiling Australasian Public Servants
News Publication Date: 14 April 2026
Web References:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0734371X251409781
References:
Franken, E., & Farr-Wharton, B. (2026). Public Service Motivation and the Circumplex Model of Affect: Profiling Australasian Public Servants. Review of Public Personnel Administration. https://doi.org/10.1177/0734371X251409781
Image Credits: Edith Cowan University
Keywords: Public Service Motivation, Circumplex Model of Affect, Public Sector Workers, Employee Motivation, Organizational Psychology, Job Satisfaction, Affective Commitment, Turnover Intention, Bureaucracy, Workforce Well-being

