The Persistent Constraints of New Public Management on Sustainable Co-Production between Non-Profit Professionals and Service Users

Citation:

Work data:

Alternate URL:
https://mdpi-res.com/d_attachment/admsci/admsci-13-00037/article_deploy/admsci-13-00037.pdf?version=1674989411

Type of work: Article (academic)

Categories:

e-Government & e-Administration | Social Media & Social Software

Tags:

co-creation, new public management, new public governance

Abstract:

In this paper, I explore whether and how New Public Management (NPM) inhibits the long-term sustainability of co-production between non-profit practitioners and service users in the United Kingdom. I show how the key elements of NPM (contracts and competitive tendering, performance measurement, a pressure for non-profits to become more ‘business-like’, and the framing of citizens as ‘customers’) provide distinct barriers for non-profits to engage in co-production over the longer term, inhibiting the long-term creation of value for citizens. Through an analysis of seven case study organisations, this paper contributes to building theory about the sustainability of co-production, the factors that shape enduring co-production, and the compatibility/incompatibility of NPM tools with co-production.

Downloads:

logo of PDF file
Full document:
McMullin, C. (2023). “The Persistent Constraints of New Public Management on Sustainable Co-Production between Non-Profit Professionals and Service Users”. In Administrative Sciences, 2 (2). Postfach: MDPI.