What is it about?

‘Co-production’? Does a day go past in the public sector without us hearing about it? But what exactly does it mean? Current approaches now tend to focus specifically on the contributions made by citizens, whether individually as service users or collectively in communities, and therefore do not include as ‘co-production’ interorganizational collaboration. And we tend to focus not just on the co-production of ‘a good or service’, but also on the achievement of behaviour change and of the outcomes desired personally by citizens and organizationally by the public sector. However, co-production is not the only term for such ‘joint production’ with citizens— it can be found variously under the labels of ‘co-commissioning’, ‘co-governance’, ‘co-construction’, ‘co-design’, ‘co-delivery’, ‘co-management’ and ‘co-assessment’. Recent debate on co-creation of value has added further to the complexity. Interest in co-production has become more intense in many countries after the onset of the global financial crisis, especially where this has brought prolonged austerity and major cutbacks in the public sector. In the UK, for example, the Cabinet Office released a report on co-production in 2009 that has been followed up by many reports by governments, local authorities, academics, think tanks and consultants. Subsequently, many public agencies have signed up to the concept, proclaiming that making the most of co-production is ‘embedded’ within their policies and practices. However, is this all that it seems? Current workshops with practitioners in the UK reveal that they are unaware of the nature of intrinsic co-production within ‘actually existing’ public service delivery, and how to work with it, and that they believe that the service-enhancing potential of active co-production is not being fulfilled.

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Why is it important?

Unfortunately, the research base of co-production is thinner in public services than in private services, where the concept of co-production has played a core role for decades. Many case studies have been published in recent years, generally using qualitative methodologies. Some surveys have thrown light on the extent and intensity of co-production and the motivations behind it. However, the questions raised here have not yet been answered. Moreover, there has been a shortage of well-evidenced evaluations of the results achieved when either ‘intrinsic’ or ‘active’ co-production of public services is managed more systematically. The determinants of successful strategies to make the most of co-production are still unclear—moreover, the question of the dark side of co-production in public organizations is less recognized. Finally, co-production finds itself at the intersection of many different professional and academic disciplines, yet with little integration at a theoretical level. Consequently, Public Money & Management is committed to taking forward this debate with a theme issue in 2018 dedicated to co-production both empirically and theoretically. We are seeking contributions that address these questions and that provide rigorously demonstrated results (positive and negative) from initiatives and strategic approaches to engage more systematically with co-production in order to improve service outcomes. We welcome quantitative and qualitative analysis, as well as theoretical integration. The full details for submitting papers are given in this paper - we look forward to your response!

Perspectives

It might be expected that—at least in those countries suffering the greatest public sector cutbacks—the emphasis in co-production would be on co-delivery, incorporating citizen inputs in order to make public services cheaper, at least in the longer term. Yet much of the practice—and the rhetoric from think tanks and interest lobbies—continues to privilege getting citizen ‘voice’ into public policies and services, rather than getting them to do things for themselves and for each other. Why is this? Does it represent a lack of understanding of the nature of service delivery? Or is it, rather, a lack of trust in the capabilities of citizens, from politicians and public service professionals? We are hoping that some answers to these, and other, questions will be forthcoming in the papers submitted to this Special Issue of Public Money and Management. Feel free to discuss with us as editors what you intend submitting as a paper - we'll be happy to explore ways of making the papers complementary. And we have explicitly asked that all papers have a practitioner as a (joint) author, in the spirit of co-production!

Professor Tony Bovaird
University of Birmingham

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This page is a summary of: Debate: Co-production of public services and outcomes, Public Money & Management, February 2017, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/09540962.2017.1294866.
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