1st Edition

New Public Governance, the Third Sector, and Co-Production

Edited By Victor Pestoff, Taco Brandsen, Bram Verschuere Copyright 2012
    424 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    424 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In recent years public management research in a variety of disciplines has paid increasing attention to the role of citizens and the third sector in the provision of public services. Several of these efforts have employed the concept of co-production to better understand and explain this trend. This book aims to go further by systematizing the growing body of academic papers and reports that focus on various aspects of co-production and its potential contribution to new public governance. It has an interdisciplinary focus that makes a unique contribution to the body of knowledge in this field, at the cross-roads of a number of disciplines - including business administration, policy studies, political science, public management, sociology, third sector studies, etc. The unique presentation of them together in this volume both allows for comparing and contrasting these different perspectives and for potential theoretical collaboration and development. More particularly, this volume addresses the following concerns: What is the nature of co-production and what challenges does it face? How can we conceptualize the concept of co-production? How does co-production works in practice? How does co-production unfold in reality? What can be the effects of co-production? And more specific, firstly, how can co-production contribute to service quality and service management in public services, and secondly, what is the input of co-production on growing citizen involvement and development of participative democracy?

    1. Co-Production as a Maturing Concept Taco Brandsen, Victor Pestoff and Bram Verschuere  Part 1: What Is Co-Production? Conceptual and Theoretical Perspectives  2. Co-Production and Third Sector Social Services in Europe: Some Crucial Conceptual Issues Victor Pestoff  3. From Engagement to Co-Production: How Users and Communities Contribute To Public Services Tony Bovaird and Elke Loeffler  4. Co-Production: Contested Meanings and Challenges for User Organizations Benjamin Ewert and Adalbert Evers  5. Third Sector and the Co-Construction of Canadian Public Policy Yves Vaillancourt  6. From Co-Production to Co-Governance John M. Ackerman  Part 2: How Does Co-Production Work?  7. Co-Production from a Normative Perspective Edgar S. Cahn and Christine Gray  8. Co-Production and Network Structures in Public Education David O. Porter  9. The Conditions for Successful Co-Production in Housing: A Case Study of German Housing Cooperatives Taco Brandsen and Jan-Kees Helderman  10. Co-Production in an Information Age Albert Meijer  Part 3: How Does Co-Management Work?  11. Co-Management to Solve Homelessness: Wicked Solutions for Wicked Problems Kerry Brown, Robyn Keast, Jennifer Waterhouse, Glen Murphy and Myrna Mandell  12. Co-Management in Urban Regeneration: New Perspectives on Transferable Collaborative Practice Hans Schlappa  13. ‘Don’t Bite The Hand That Feeds You?’ On The Partnerships between Private Citizen Initiatives and Local Government Karolien Dezeure and Filip De Rynck  14. Co-Producing Safety or Participative Window Dressing? Regulation Partnerships in German Local Governance Arrangements Matthias Freise  15. The Potential of Nonprofit-Government Partnerships for Promoting Citizen Involvement Ichiro Tsukamoto  Part 4: Effects Of Co-Production: Service Quality, Accountability and Democracy  16. Co-Production and Service Quality: A New Perspective for the Swedish Welfare State Johan Vamstad  17. Co-Production: An Alternative to the Partial Privatization Processes in Italy and Norway Andrea Calabrò  18. The Challenges of Co-Management for Public Accountability: Lessons From Flemish Childcare Diederik Vancoppenolle and Bram Verschuere  19. New Public Governance, Co-Production and Third Sector Social Services in Europe: Crowding In and Crowding Out Victor Pestoff  20. Conclusion: Taking Research on Co-Production a Step Further Taco Brandsen, Bram Verschuere and Victor Pestoff

    Biography

    Victor A. Pestoff is Professor Emeritus in Political Science and currently Guest Professor at the Institute for Civil Society Studies at Ersta Skondal University College in Stockholm, Sweden. He has over 35 years of research on the Third Sector, its role in public policy and providing social services. His latest books are A Democratic Architecture for the Welfare State (2009), and together with Taco Brandsen (eds) Co-Production. The Third Sector and the Delivery of Public Services (2008 & 2009), both at Routledge: London & New York.

    Taco Brandsen is Associate Professor in Public Administration at the Nijmegen School of Management, Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands. His current research focuses on public services, innovation, governance and civil society. His latest books are Civicness in the Governance and Delivery of Social Services (2010, with Paul Dekker & Adalbert Evers), The Future of Governance in Europe and the US (2010, with Marc Holzer) and Co-Production. The Third Sector and the Delivery of Public Services (Routledge, 2008 & 2009, with Victor Pestoff).

    Bram Verschuere is Assistant Professor at the Department of Business and Public Administration of University College Ghent (Ghent University Association), Belgium. His main research and teaching interests are in public management, public sector organization, state-nonprofit relationships, and welfare policy. His latest books are Autonomy and Control of State Agencies: Comparing States and Agencies (2010, with Koen Verhoest, Paul Roness, Kristin Rubecksen and Muiris McCarthaigh), and Re-thinking the State: Critical Perspectives on the Citizen, Politics and Government in the 21st Century (2009, with Filip De Rynck and Ellen Wayenberg).

    "This text will serve as a broad reservoir of knowledge on the positive impact of co-production in its various aspects on public management throughout the world." - Dean Eitel, De Paul University, USA

    "This is a welcome contribution which helps to theorise the links between co-production, the third sector and types of networked governance, and also to consolidate and broaden the evidence base around why state and third sector organisations should encourage co-production." - Catherine Needham, University of Birmingham, UK