@incollection{SchomakerBauer2020, author = {Rahel M. Schomaker and Michael W. Bauer}, title = {Mild Hit, Flexible Response: How Local Administrations in Austria and Germany Confronted (First Wave of the) Covid-19 Pandemic}, series = {Good Public Governance in a Global Pandemic}, editor = {Paul Joyce and Fabienne Maron and Purshottama Sivanarain Reddy}, publisher = {IIAS}, address = {Brussels}, isbn = {978-2-931003-02-2}, pages = {525 -- 534}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The Covid-19 pandemic constitutes a veritable capacity test for local administrations in Germany and Austria. Based on a survey among systematically sampled Austrian (n=130) and German (n=517) employees of local public administrations, the article taps into the perceptions of how the bureaucracies in the two federal states coped with the challenges emerging at the early stage of the crisis. As it turns out, in the administratively well-equipped and—in comparison to disastrous situations elsewhere—mildly hit countries, local administrations did fine—even growing beyond themselves. Key to a higher probability of coping well with Covid-19 appears to be an intelligent administrative networking strategy. Five tentative lessons are drawn on what—at this early stage—can only constitute an incomplete picture taken from a fluid context.}, language = {en} }