Collaborative Governance: Private Roles for Public Goals in Turbulent Times

Collaborative Governance: Private Roles for Public Goals in Turbulent Times

Collaborative Governance: Private Roles for Public Goals in Turbulent Times

Collaborative Governance: Private Roles for Public Goals in Turbulent Times

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Overview

How government can forge dynamic public-private partnerships

All too often government lacks the skill, the will, and the wallet to meet its missions. Schools fall short of the mark while roads and bridges fall into disrepair. Health care costs too much and delivers too little. Budgets bleed red ink as the cost of services citizens want outstrips the taxes they are willing to pay. Collaborative Governance is the first book to offer solutions by demonstrating how government at every level can engage the private sector to overcome seemingly insurmountable problems and achieve public goals more effectively.

John Donahue and Richard Zeckhauser show how the public sector can harness private expertise to bolster productivity, capture information, and augment resources. The authors explain how private engagement in public missions—rightly structured and skillfully managed—is not so much an alternative to government as the way smart government ought to operate. The key is to carefully and strategically grant discretion to private entities, whether for-profit or nonprofit, in ways that simultaneously motivate and empower them to create public value. Drawing on a host of real-world examples-including charter schools, job training, and the resurrection of New York's Central Park—they show how, when, and why collaboration works, and also under what circumstances it doesn't.

Collaborative Governance reveals how the collaborative approach can be used to tap the resourcefulness and entrepreneurship of the private sector, and improvise fresh, flexible solutions to today's most pressing public challenges.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400838103
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 02/28/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 802 KB

About the Author

John D. Donahue and Richard J. Zeckhauser both teach at the Harvard Kennedy School--Zeckhauser economics and analytics, Donahue public management and business-government relations. They write on related themes, Donahue mostly books (this is his twelfth) while Zeckhauser favors articles (he's done hundreds, several of them seminal). Donahue chairs Harvard's Master in Public Policy program and held senior roles in the Clinton administration. Zeckhauser pioneered the field of policy analysis and is a national-champion bridge player.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Stephen Breyer ix
Part I: The Promise and Problems of Collaboration
Chapter 1: Private Roles for Public Goals 3
Chapter 2: Rationales and Reservations 27
Chapter 3
: he Delegator’s Dilemma 45
Part II: Rationales--More, Better, or Both
Chapter 4: Collaboration for Productivity 63
Chapter 5: Collaboration for Information 104
Chapter 6: Collaboration for Legitimacy 122
Chapter 7: Collaboration for Resources 156
Part III: The Art of Collaboration
Chapter 8: Tasks and Tools 207
Chapter 9: Getting Collaboration Right 240
Chapter 10: Forging the Future: Payoff s and Perils 264
Acknowledgments 289
Index 291

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"This new and insightful work by Donahue and Zeckhauser argues that many of our most important national problems cannot best be solved by government policies or programs alone, nor can they be solved by the private sector alone. Rather, they should be approached as genuine collaborations between government and the private sector, collaborations where there is true sharing of discretion between the parties. The book is full of interesting and compelling examples of such collaboration, drawn from education, urban policy, national security, and beyond, some of which were very successful and some much less so. Analyzing these examples and cases, the book provides a detailed and useful range of prescriptions for government as it pursues these collaborative efforts. The book generalizes beyond these case examples and prescriptions and develops a new conceptual framework for considering and designing collaborations. Surely genuine government-private collaborations will increasingly be one of the most important ways we approach many of our most pressing problems, and this new book makes a vital contribution to understanding and promoting these creative efforts."—Jay O. Light, dean emeritus, Harvard Business School

"Government vs. the market was the central subject in the twentieth-century debates. How best to combine public and private sector efforts to meet the needs of citizens is the key subject for the twenty-first century. Zeckhauser and Donahue's important book will define this debate for years to come. It should be read by anyone in the public sector who wants to work with the private sector and anyone in the private sector who wants to work with the public sector."—Lawrence H. Summers, Charles W. Eliot University Professor, Harvard University

"This book intrigued me. All the principles of this pioneering subject are illustrated here with crisp case studies, which makes for happy reading. These authors know how to write."—Thomas C. Schelling, Nobel Prize-winning economist

"Government can't solve all our problems. But nor can the private sector. Public-private collaborations—through which government pursues public missions by engaging private players—can be an important part of any solution. In this lucid and thoughtful book, John D. Donahue and Richard J. Zeckhauser explain how they work, why and under what circumstances they work best, and how policymakers have successfully blended private-sector efficiencies with public accountability. Using real-world examples drawn from policy domains as diverse as education, economic development, and health and safety, the authors describe the many advantages of collaboration and also clarify the pitfalls. The result is a wonderfully readable and useful account of how private incentives can be used to achieve public goals."—Robert B. Reich, University of California, Berkeley

"This insightful book will stimulate a rethinking of the respective roles of private and public action. Donahue and Zeckhauser draw from an incredibly rich set of case studies that illustrate both the strengths and potential pitfalls of collaboration. Until now, there has been no formal articulation of the kinds of principles that this book provides for guiding policy. A genuine pleasure to read."—W. Kip Viscusi, author of Smoke-Filled Rooms: A Postmortem on the Tobacco Deal

"Collaborative Governance fills a yawning gap in the literature on collaboration and partnerships. This book achieves the gold standard for excellent writing, case selection, and presentation. The cases are interesting and cover a wide range of policy arenas. The conceptual points are made with a convincing but gentle touch."—Paul L. Posner, George Mason University

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