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Social innovation and governance in public management systems

29 Mar 2012

While the decades following the Second World War saw a proliferation of social innovations in public administration, the term "innovation" as such was rarely mentioned. Instead, emphasis was placed on the main political reforms that led, among others, to the establishment of diverse types of welfare states in the developed countries, in particular through defamilialization and decommodification of public services. However, over the past two decades, reference to innovations in public administration and public services management has become more commonplace. This growing interest in social innovations can be largely explained as the outcome of reforms inspired by New Public Management (NPM), a new paradigm that emerged in the 1980s. In this paper we begin by providing an overview of social innovations and show how a great number of these have in fact emerged from the new NPM approach. Thereafter, we take a more critical look at these innovations and discuss alternative views of innovation and governance. In conclusion, we comment on, among others, the specificity of social innovations in public administration and how this topic merits further research.
innovation government education politics public administration economics economy governance science and technology psychology business economic policy ethics externalities ppp society public sphere public–private partnership business process processes innovative new public management new  public  management new  public management open innovations new public  management

Authors

Lévesque, Benoît

ISBN
9782896053391
Pages
39
Published in
Canada

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