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Chapter

Urban Regeneration in the Netherlands: Managerial Flow and Organizational Form

Chapter

Urban Regeneration in the Netherlands: Managerial Flow and Organizational Form

DOI link for Urban Regeneration in the Netherlands: Managerial Flow and Organizational Form

Urban Regeneration in the Netherlands: Managerial Flow and Organizational Form book

Urban Regeneration in the Netherlands: Managerial Flow and Organizational Form

DOI link for Urban Regeneration in the Netherlands: Managerial Flow and Organizational Form

Urban Regeneration in the Netherlands: Managerial Flow and Organizational Form book

ByMICHIEL KORT
BookManagerial Flow

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Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2015
Imprint Routledge
Pages 11
eBook ISBN 9781315796116

ABSTRACT

Globally, public-private partnerships (PPPs) have become prominent policy instruments. PPPs exist when there is a “sustainable cooperation between public and private actors in which joint products and/or services are developed and in which risks, costs and profi ts are shared” (Klijn & Teisman 2003, 138). Within PPPs, private parties are involved in the decision-making process and are said to contribute more intensively than in more traditional client-supplier or principal-agent partnerships. In theory, this results in a bundling of expertise, knowledge and interests, and the sharing of risks and responsibilities, which in turn produces better and more effi cient results and value (Ghobadian, Gallear, O’Regan, & Viney, 2004; Hodge & Greve 2010). Value encompasses better and more effi cient policy outcomes, and can take on different shapes, such as more timely delivery, higher costeffi ciency, risk-sharing opportunities, synergetic and/or integrated development, and the introduction of new product and services (Ghobadian, et al., 2004; Huxham, 2000).

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