University of California | School of Social Welfare | Center for Social Services Research | Berkeley, CA 90720 | www.mackcenter.org


 

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Beyond the contract: the scope and nature of informal government-nonprofit partnerships.

Abstract

Privatization research lacks an understanding of the scope and nature of informal service delivery relationships between nonprofits and local government. This article reports on a study of local service delivery partnerships in Georgia using survey and interview data. In addition to assessing the frequency of non-contractual partnerships, this study builds on B. Guy Peters's definition of public-private partnerships to delineate the control-formality dimensions of these partnerships more clearly. The agency theory notion that a trade-off occurs between formality and control is also tested. The findings show that most public-private partnerships involving nonprofits are led by government agencies, and they are only weakly collaborative in the sense of shared authority or resources. Often, community norms substitute for formal service agreements. The study concludes with suggestions for further research regarding trust and behavioral norms in public-private partnerships.

Journal

Public Administration Review

(2008)
vol68 no1 pages141-154

Categories

  1. Managing External Relations  
  2. Public-Private Partnerships