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Processual Perspectives on the Co-Production Turn in Public Sector Organizations

Processual Perspectives on the Co-Production Turn in Public Sector Organizations

Anja Overgaard Thomassen, Julie Borup Jensen
Copyright: © 2021 |Pages: 340
ISBN13: 9781799849759|ISBN10: 1799849759|EISBN13: 9781799849766|ISBN13 Softcover: 9781799858850
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-4975-9
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MLA

Thomassen, Anja Overgaard, and Julie Borup Jensen, editors. Processual Perspectives on the Co-Production Turn in Public Sector Organizations. IGI Global, 2021. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-4975-9

APA

Thomassen, A. O. & Jensen, J. B. (Eds.). (2021). Processual Perspectives on the Co-Production Turn in Public Sector Organizations. IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-4975-9

Chicago

Thomassen, Anja Overgaard, and Julie Borup Jensen, eds. Processual Perspectives on the Co-Production Turn in Public Sector Organizations. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2021. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-4975-9

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Existing research understands co-production as leading to shifts in roles of the public sector institutions and their staffs. The shift is seen in the way that a discursive use of the term service provision with embedded logics encompassing fiscal accountability, performance measurement, efficiency, and process regulation has changed towards discourses that embrace collaboration between the public sector front staff and the citizens, with the aim of developing legitimate and effective welfare services that are co-produced by means of active participation and distributed decision making. However, this change requires new approaches to the way in which the implementation of new practices and tools is executed in practice as studied and researched, and how the new practices and tools are understood and evaluated in organizations.

Processual Perspectives on the Co-Production Turn in Public Sector Organizations is an essential reference book that examines, unfolds, and develops approaches to co-production and implementation as dynamic, processual, collaborative, sensemaking, and as requiring and resulting in capacity building and learning. Moreover, the book examines new approaches to engage citizens and public sector actors in collaborative and co-productive processes, especially with concern for new goals pertaining to sustainability, social equity, democratic legitimacy, etc. Covering topics that include knowledge management and collective leadership, the book presents perspectives on capacity building, learning, change, and evaluation in organizations and current research in different areas of the public sector. It is intended for public sector administrators and managers investigating the relevancy, approaches, and methods in co-production. Furthermore, it targets civil actors and welfare service users, leaders and managers of public organizations, researchers, academicians, and students in programs that include social welfare development, public administration, political science, and organizational development.

Table of Contents

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Front Materials
Title Page
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Copyright Page
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Advances in Public Policy and Administration (APPA) Book Series
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Editorial Advisory Board
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Preface
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Acknowledgment
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Chapters
Chapter 1
Introduction  (pages 22-22)
Introduction
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Chapter 2
Introduction of organizational and more general perspectives and discussions regarding co-production.
Capacity Building in and for Co-Production
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Chapter 3
The section discusses the importance and characteristics of management in co-production.
Implications of the Co-Production Turn on Leadership
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Chapter 4
The focus on processes in co-production leads to new relations and role-perceptions among staff and citizens.
New Perspectives for the Citizen-Staff Relation in Co-Production
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Chapter 5
New insights and inspiration regarding how to operationalize processual perspectives in organizational and research practice.
Practice Approaches to Processes in Co-Production
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Back Materials
Compilation of References
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About the Contributors
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Index
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