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From Digital Governance to Public Value: The Mediating Role of Digital HRM in Public Service Organizations

Author

Listed:
  • Hiyam Abdulrahim

    (Department of Economics, College of Business Administration, Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University, P.O. Box 84428, Riyadh 11671, Saudi Arabia)

  • Abdelrehim Awad

    (Department of Business Administration, College of Business, University of Bisha, Bisha 67714, Saudi Arabia)

  • Adel Ghonim

    (Department of Business Administration, College of Business, University of Bisha, Bisha 67714, Saudi Arabia)

  • Mohamed Shemais Ibrahim

    (Department of Public Administration, Sadat Academy for Management Sciences, Cairo 11728, Egypt)

  • Abdelnaser Mohamed Sayed

    (Department of Public Administration, The Arab Academy for Management Banking and Financial Sciences, Giza 12588, Egypt)

  • Dina Helmy Al Nashily

    (Department of Business Administration, Faculty of Commerce, Al-Azhar University, Cairo 11884, Egypt)

  • Ranya Mahfouz

    (Economic Department, Higher Institute for Computer Science & Business Administration, El Zarqa Damietta 34722, Egypt)

Abstract

This study examines how digital governance (DG) contributes to public value (PV) in a large, service-intensive public organization and tests whether digitally enabled human resource management practices (DHRM) transmit this effect. Using a cross-sectional survey of employees in Egypt Post ( n = 278), items were measured on a five-point Likert scale and analyzed with reliability diagnostics, validity assessments (CFA, CR, AVE, HTMT), and regression-based mediation with 5000 bootstrap resamples. All scales showed strong internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha: DG = 0.903, DHRM = 0.948, PV = 0.923) and convergent validity (AVE greater than 0.50). Discriminant validity was confirmed via HTMT (less than 0.85). The study finds that DG was positively associated with PV (beta = 0.773, p less than 0.001) and with DHRM (beta = 0.818, p less than 0.001). DHRM was also positively associated with PV when controlling for DG (beta = 0.332, p less than 0.001). Bootstrapping confirmed a significant indirect effect of DG on PV through DHRM (a times b = 0.281; 95% CI [0.156, 0.424]), indicating partial mediation. This study advances public value scholarship by specifying DHRM as a micro-foundation linking governance capacity to value outcomes, demonstrating the partial mediation mechanism in an under-researched Middle Eastern public-sector context, and providing empirical evidence that digital transformation yields higher public value when governance arrangements are translated into workforce routines and capabilities via digital HRM. Implications: The findings suggest that public managers should treat HR digitalization as a core implementation mechanism alongside governance reforms.

Suggested Citation

  • Hiyam Abdulrahim & Abdelrehim Awad & Adel Ghonim & Mohamed Shemais Ibrahim & Abdelnaser Mohamed Sayed & Dina Helmy Al Nashily & Ranya Mahfouz, 2026. "From Digital Governance to Public Value: The Mediating Role of Digital HRM in Public Service Organizations," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(6), pages 1-18, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:6:p:3044-:d:1899420
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