What is it about?

Co-production refers to joint working between people or groups who have traditionally been separated into categories of user and producer. The article focuses on the co-production of public services, offering theory-based and knowledge-based routes to evidencing co-production. I

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Why is it important?

The paper outlines some ‘good enough’ methodologies which community organisations and service providers can use to assess their potential contribution to co-production. These are appreciative inquiry, peer-to-peer learning and data sharing. These approaches have the potential to foster innovation and scale-out experimentation.

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This page is a summary of: Generating 'good enough' evidence for co-production, Evidence & Policy, January 2017, Policy Press,
DOI: 10.1332/174426415x14440619792955.
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