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Co-production (approach)

Co-production (or coproduction) is an approach in the development and delivery of public services and technology in which citizens and other key stakeholders and concepts in human society are implicitly involved in the process. In many countries, co-production is increasingly perceived as a new public administration paradigm as it involves a whole new thinking about public service delivery and policy development.[1] In co-productive approaches, citizens are not only consulted, but are part of the conception, design, steering, and ongoing management of services.[2] The concept has a long history, arising out of radical theories of knowledge in the 1970s, and can be applied in a range of sectors across society including health research, and science more broadly.

Definitions edit

An organisation called the Co-production Network for Wales describes co-production as "an asset-based approach to public services that enables people providing and people receiving services to share power and responsibility, and to work together in equal, reciprocal and caring relationships".[3] According to Governance International, co-production is about "public service organisations and citizens making better use of each other’s assets, resources and contributions".[4]

Co-production is designed to address real-world application of knowledge and forms part of what is termed Mode 2 of knowledge production, which in the sociology of science is used to describe one of the ways that knowledge is formed.[5][6][7] In Mode 2, science and technology studies move from extreme technological determinism and social constructivism, to a more systemic understanding of how technology and society ‘co-produce’ each other. Co-production is functionally comparable to the concepts of causality loop, positive feedback, and co-evolution – all of which describe how two or more variables of a system affect and essentially create each other, albeit with respect to different variables operating at different scales.

Origins edit

Experiments on co-production on public services have been launched in many countries, from Denmark to Malaysia, the UK and the US.[8]

The term 'co-production' was originally coined in the late 1970s by Elinor Ostrom and colleagues at Indiana University to explain why neighbourhood crime rates went up in Chicago when the city's police officers retreated from the street into cars.[9][10] Similarly to Jane Jacobs' assessment of the importance of long-time residents to the safety and vitality of New York's old neighbourhoods, Ostrom noted that by becoming detached from people and their everyday lives on the streets, Chicago's police force lost an essential source of insider information, making it harder for them to do their work as effectively.

What Ostrom and her colleagues were recognising was that services – in this case policing – rely as much upon the unacknowledged knowledge, assets and efforts of service 'users' as the expertise of professional providers. It was the informal understanding of local communities and the on the ground relationships they had developed with police officers that had helped keep crime levels down. In short, the police needed the community as much as the community needed the police. The concept of the 'core economy', first articulated by Neva Goodwin and subsequently developed by Edgar S. Cahn, is helpful in explaining this further.

The core economy is made up of all the resources embedded in people's everyday lives – time, energy, wisdom, experience, knowledge and skills – and the relationships between them – love, empathy, watchfulness, care, reciprocity, teaching and learning. Similar to the role played by the operating system of a computer, the core economy is the basic, yet essential, platform upon which 'specialist programmes' in society, the market economy and public services run. Our specialised services dealing with crime, education, care, health and so on are all underpinned by the family, the neighbourhood, community and civil society.[9]

This understanding has helped to radically reframe the potential role of 'users' and 'professionals' in the process of producing services. Far from being passive consumers, or needy drains on public finances, people, their family, friends and communities are understood as important agents with the capacity to design and even deliver services with improved outcomes.

Professionals, for their part, need to find ways of engaging meaningfully with the core economy; helping it to grow, flourish and realise its full potential – not atrophy as a result of neglect or exploitation. Significantly, as the New Economics Foundation (NEF) note:

"This is not about consultation or participation – except in the broadest sense. The point is not to consult more, or involve people more in decisions; it is to encourage them to use the human skills and experience they have to help deliver public or voluntary services. It is, according to Elizabeth Hoodless at Community Service Volunteers, about "broadening and deepening" public services so that they are no longer the preserve of professionals or commissioners, but a shared responsibility, both building and using a multi-faceted network of mutual support".[9]

Areas of application edit

Science, technology and society edit

From a more science, technology and society (STS) perspective, Sheila Jasanoff, has written that "Co-production is shorthand for the proposition that the ways in which we know and represent the world (both nature and society) are inseparable from the ways in which we chose to live in." Co-production draws on constitutive (such as Actor–network theory) and interactional work (such as the Edinburgh School) in STS. As a sensitizing concept, the idiom of co-production looks at four themes: "the emergence and stabilization of new techno-scientific objects and framings, the resolution of scientific and technical controversies; the processes by which the products of techno-science are made intelligible and portable across boundaries; and the adjustment of science’s cultural practices in response to the contexts in which science is done." Studies employing co-production often follow the following pathways: "making identities, making institutions, making discourses, and making representations"[11]

Co-production of climate services edit

A disconnect exists between the climate information that is produced by science (in terms of weather forecasts and climate projections) and what is needed by users to make climate-resilient decisions. The mismatch usually relates to time scales, spatial scales, and metrics. Co-producing climate services, by bringing together producers and users of climate information for dialogue, can lead to the creation of new knowledge that is more appropriate for use in terms of being tailored and targeted to particular decisions.

As in other fields, co-production of climate services, can create challenges due to differences in the incentives, priorities and languages of the various parties (often grouped into "producers" of information and "users" of information). Although there are no recipes for how to co-produce climate services, there are a number of building blocks and principles.[12]

Concepts of co-production edit

Co-production is based on the production of own services and resources by citizens, completely or in part.[13] It involves the willingness of citizens or users together with public services to design, implement and improve the delivery of services in order to innovate and transform public services.[14]

Co-management edit

The concept of co-management implies the introduction of a third party (citizens, users, private organization or other public organization) into the process of management of the delivery of the service.[13] The involvement of the third party actually takes place from the nineteenth century, however, it was not defined as a concept back then.

Co-management creates the phenomenon by bringing relations between different organizations to internal production process and creating new networks, which in some cases brings strong positive impact, however, can be seen as negative due to the lack of accountability and increasing competition between different networks.[15]

Co-governance edit

The concept of co-governance lies under the arrangement of the third party and public agencies if decision making and planning of public services.[13]

Co-design edit

Co-designing refers to the process of a collective knowledge sharing and knowledge creation.[16] Key components of a co-design process can involve:[17]

  • Intentionally involving target users in designing solutions;
  • Postponing design decisions until after gathering feedback;
  • Synthesising feedback from target users into insights;
  • Developing solutions based on feedback.

Co-delivery edit

Co-delivery implies the improvement of outcomes with a collective effort. It is usually implemented as non-profit organization.[18]

Co-assessment edit

Co-assessment refers to the monitoring of public service quality and outcomes.[18] Co-assessment of public services brings a radically different perspective to deciding what works – and what doesn’t.[19] However, co-assessment can carry potential risks such as: lack of knowledge, lack of resources, time consumption.

Co-produced knowledge edit

Scholars have discussed the role of co-production in decolonising research and implementation of services by including a mixture of research, state and public (community) stakeholders in the process; a process that results in strong mutual ownership.[20] Particularly this has been linked to the "triangle that moves the mountain" approach for addressing social challenges, originally developed in Thailand.[21]

Challenges edit

Co-production, as a method, approach and mind-set, is very different from traditional models of service provision. As has been shown, it fundamentally alters the relationship between service providers and users; it emphasises people as active agents, not passive beneficiaries; and, in large part because of this alternative process, it tends to lead towards better, more preventative outcomes in the long-term.

Because of its radically different nature, however, people wishing to practice co-production face a number of significant challenges. As NEF/NESTA comments:

"Overall, the challenge seems to amount to one clear problem. Co-production, even in the most successful and dramatic examples, barely fits the standard shape of public services or charities or the systems we have developed to 'deliver' support, even though [in the UK] policy documents express ambitions to empower and engage local communities, to devolve power and increase individuals' choice and control."[22][23]

This misfit makes practising co-production difficult, and mainstreaming good practice particularly so. Existing structures and frameworks work against, not with, co-production. In order for it to flourish as a viable alternative to the expensive and in many cases failing, status quo change needs to take place.

NEF/NESTA highlight four areas where such change will be required;

  • Funding and Commissioning: Commissioners of public money will need to change their established ways of doing things. Applying strict quantitative targets and stipulating rigid, short-term outputs with a mind to economic efficiency acts as a barrier to co-produced service models. In order to 'commission for change' narrow outputs need to be broadened and complemented by outcomes based commissioning.
  • Generating evidence and making the case for co-production: The obvious reason why many commissioning frameworks favour outputs over outcomes is that they are simply measured, making it deceptively easy to evaluate success or failure. But real success is not easily measurable. Nor are many of the preventative benefits of co-production easy to quantify. Making the case for co-production and capturing its complex and myriad benefits is a key challenge.
  • Taking successful approaches to scale: It is fair to say that the majority of examples where co-production is being successfully practiced take place at a local scale. To a great extent this has been instrumental to their success; they are rooted in local realities, have grown organically from the ground based on local assets and ideas and emphasise the importance of face-to-face relationships. There is a potential tension to be overcome here; ensuring that a service remains locally rooted, whilst simultaneously expanding the scope of coverage nationally. Where this has been achieved (see KeyRing, Shared Lives and LAC in Australia) the tendency towards replication and blueprinting has been strongly resisted. Instead of simplistically transplanting a 'model' in new regions, these organisations have taken forward a common 'method' that involves engaging with local assets and resources in a consistent way.

Co-production also suits smaller organisations (traditionally those in the third sector) that are more used to working in less structured and hierarchical ways. This is something that large public sector structures are much less used to doing. If co-production is to be a mainstream way of working across public sector services, a structural and cultural shift will also need to take place.

  • Developing required professional skills: Years of working to narrowly defined roles and job descriptions has understandably led to many public service professionals seeing their 'clients' through circumscribed lenses; as patients that need to be cared for, rather than people who could be enabled. It can also be difficult for any professional to relinquish control and 'hand over the stick'; not only does this challenge occupational identities but it also confers a greater sense of risk – co-production can be 'messy' and is inimical to rigid control. If the hearts and minds of those delivering services on the ground cannot be changed, and if the necessary skills associated with relinquishing control are not embedded, co-production is likely to be constrained.

Resources and examples edit

  • Interactive Good Practice Co-Production Catalogue from Wales
  • The coproduced Marco Calvallo Mental Health Center
  • Skills for Health Work with people and significant others to develop services to improve their mental health
  • Co-production Wales, All in this together
  • Parents_as_Pre-school_Education_Service_Co-producers_in_Lithuania
  • Co-production - Enhancing the role of citizens in governance and service delivery (EU 2018)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Putans, R., Zeibote, Z. (2021). Public services client-accordance through co production and digitalization. European Studies - the review of European Law, Economics and Politics, 28(1), p.127-147. ISSN 1805-8809. Available at: https://caes.upol.cz/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/121-147-Putans-Zeibote.pdf (article)
  2. ^ Christian Bason Leading public sector innovation: Co-creating for a better society, Bristol, Policy Press, 2010
  3. ^ Co-production Network for Wales
  4. ^ Governance International
  5. ^ Michael Gibbons, Camille Limoges, Helga Nowotny, Simon Schwartzman, Peter Scott and Martin Trow The New Production of Knowledge: The dynamics of science and research in contemporary societies Sage. 1994
  6. ^ Jasanoff, Sheila. States of Knowledge: The Co-Production of Science and the Social Order. Routledge. 2004. ISBN 978-0-415-40329-0
  7. ^ Harbers, Hans. Inside the Politics of Technology: Agency and Normativity in the Co-Production of Technology and Society. Amsterdam University Press. 2005. ISBN 978-90-5356-756-2
  8. ^ Paul Scriven (13 November 2012). "International focus: public service co-production around the world". Guardian Professional. Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  9. ^ a b c new economics foundation (2008) Co-production: A manifesto for growing the core economy
  10. ^ The new economics foundation/NESTA (2009) The Challenge of Co-production
  11. ^ Jasanoff, Sheila. States of Knowledge: The Co-Production of Science and the Social Order 2015-04-09 at the Wayback Machine. Routledge. 2004
  12. ^ Carter, Suzanne; Steynor, Anna; Vincent, Katharine; Visman, Emma; Waagsaether, Katinka L. (2019). Co-production in African weather and climate services. Manual (PDF). WISER and Future Climate For Africa.
  13. ^ a b c Pestoff, Victor (2013-06-19). Pestoff, Victor; Brandsen, Taco; Verschuere, Bram (eds.). New Public Governance, the Third Sector, and Co-Production. doi:10.4324/9780203152294. ISBN 9780203152294.
  14. ^ Osborne, Stephen P.; Strokosch, Kirsty (September 2013). "It takes Two to Tango? Understanding the Co-production of Public Services by Integrating the Services Management and Public Administration Perspectives: It takes Two to Tango?" (PDF). British Journal of Management. 24: S31–S47. doi:10.1111/1467-8551.12010. hdl:20.500.11820/5d295c9e-c567-42f2-9ab5-cec727850dc4. S2CID 153893466.
  15. ^ Brandsen, Taco; Hout, Eelco van (December 2006). "Co-management in public service networks: The organizational effects". Public Management Review. 8 (4): 537–549. doi:10.1080/14719030601022908. ISSN 1471-9037. S2CID 154024742.
  16. ^ Sanders, Elizabeth B.-N.; Stappers, Pieter Jan (March 2008). "Co-creation and the new landscapes of design". CoDesign. 4 (1): 5–18. doi:10.1080/15710880701875068. ISSN 1571-0882.
  17. ^ "Guide to co-design — Roadmap to Informed Communities". communities.sunlightfoundation.com. Retrieved 2020-01-10.
  18. ^ a b "CitizenPoweredCities: Co-producing better public services with citizens - OPSI". www.oecd.org. Retrieved 2020-01-08.
  19. ^ "Governance International - CO-ASSESS". www.govint.org. Retrieved 2020-01-10.
  20. ^ Heath, Cai; Mormina, Maru (2022-08-01). "Moving from Collaboration to Co-production in International Research". The European Journal of Development Research. 34 (4): 1704–1715. doi:10.1057/s41287-022-00552-y. ISSN 1743-9728.
  21. ^ Tangcharoensathien, Viroj; Sirilak, Supakit; Sritara, Piyamitr; Patcharanarumol, Walaiporn; Lekagul, Angkana; Isaranuwatchai, Wanrudee; Wittayapipopsakul, Woranan; Chandrasiri, Orana (2021-02-16). "Co-production of evidence for policies in Thailand: from concept to action". BMJ. 372: m4669. doi:10.1136/bmj.m4669. ISSN 1756-1833. PMC 7879270. PMID 33593790.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-06-04. Retrieved 2011-03-08.
  23. ^ . Publicservice.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 March 2012. Retrieved 19 February 2019.

Selected Co-production Bibliography edit

  • Alford, J. (1998), A public management road less traveled: clients as co-producers of public services. Australian Journal of Public Administration, 57 (4), 128-137.
  • Alford, J. (2007), Engaging public sector clients: from service delivery to co-production. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Barnes, M., Harrison, S., Mort, M., Shardlow, P. and Wistow G. (1999), 'The new management of community care: users groups, citizenship and co-production' in G.Stoker, New Management of British Local Governance. Houndmills: Macmillan.
  • Tony Bovaird (2007), "Beyond engagement and participation – user and community co-production of public services", Public Administration Review, 67 (5): 846-860 (2007).
  • Tony Bovaird and Elke Loeffler (2010), "User and community co-production of public services and public policies through collective decision-making: the role of emerging technologies" in T. Brandsen and Marc Holzer (Eds), The Future of Governance. Newark, NJ: National Center for Public Performance.
  • Tony Bovaird and Elke Loeffler (2012), "From Engagement to Co-production: How Users and Communities Contribute to Public Services" in Taco Brandsen and Victor Pestoff (Eds), New Public Governance, the Third Sector and Co-Production. London: Routledge.
  • Matthew Horne and Tom Shirley (2009), Co-production in public services: a new partnership with citizens. London: Cabinet Office.
  • Roger Dunston, Alison Lee, David Boud, Pat Brodie and Mary Chiarella (2008), " Co-Production and Health System Reform – From Re-Imagining To Re-Making", Australian Journal of Public Administration, 68 (1): 39 – 52.
  • Elke Löffler, Tony Bovaird, Salvador Parrado and Greg van Ryzin (2008), "If you want to go fast, walk alone. If you want to go far, walk together": Citizens and the co-production of public services. Report to the EU Presidency. Paris: Ministry of Finance, Budget and Public Services.
  • Brudney, J. and England, R. 1983. Towards a definition of the co-production concept. Public Administration Review, 43 (10), 59-65.
  • Cahn, E.S. 2001. No More Throw-Away People: the Co-Production Imperative. Washington DC: Essential Books.
  • Hyde, P. and Davies, H.T.O. 2004. Service design, culture and performance: collusion and co-production in health care. Human Relations, 57 (1), 1407–1426.
  • Joshi, A. and Moore, M. 2003. Institutionalised Co-production: Unorthodox Public Service Delivery in Challenging Environments. Brighton: IDS.
  • Kretzmann, J. and McKnight, J. 1993. Building Communities from the Inside-Out: A Path Toward Finding and Mobilizing a Community's Assets.
  • Lovelock, C. and Young, R.F. 1979. 'Look to customers to increase productivity', Harvard Business Review, 57 (May–June), 168-178.
  • Needham, C. (2009), Co-production: an emerging evidence base for adult social care transformation. SCIE Research Briefing 31. London: Social Care Institute for Excellence.
  • Richard Normann (1984), Service Management: Strategy and Leadership in the Service Business, John Wiley and Sons.
  • Ostrom, E. 1996. Crossing the great divide: coproduction, synergy and development. World Development. 24 (6), 1073-87.
  • Parks, R.B. et al. 1981. Consumers as coproducers of public services: some economic and institutional considerations. Policy Studies Journal, 9 (Summer), 1,001-11.
  • Percy, S. 1984. Citizen participation in the co-production of urban services. Urban Affairs Quarterly, 19 (4), 431 – 446.
  • Pestoff, V. and Brandsen, T. 2007, Co-production: the third sector and the delivery of public services. London: Routledge.
  • Pocobello, R., Sehity, T. el, Negrogno, L., Minervini, C., Guida, M., & Venerito, C. n.d. Comparison of a co-produced mental health service to traditional services: A co-produced mixed-methods cross-sectional study. International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, n/a(n/a). https://doi.org/10.1111/inm.12681
  • Ramirez, R. 1999. 'Value co-production: intellectual origins and implications for practice and research', Strategic Management Journal, 20 (1), 49-65.
  • Sharp, E. 1980. Towards a new understanding of urban services and citizen participation: the co-production concept. Midwest Review of Public Administration, 14, 105-118.
  • Walker, P. 2002. Co-production. In Mayo, E. and Moore, H. (eds). Building the Mutual State: Findings from Virtual Thinktank. London: New Economics Foundation.
  • Warren, R., Harlow, K.S. and Rosentraub, M.S. 1982. 'Citizen participation in services: methodological and policy issues in co-production research', Southwestern Review of Management and Economics, 2: 41-55.
  • Whitaker, G. 1980. Co-production: citizen participation in service delivery. Public Administration Review, 40, 240-246.
  • Wickström, S. 1996. The customer as co-producer. European Journal of Marketing, 30(4):6-19.
  • Zeleny, M. 1978. Towards Self-Service Society. New York: Columbia University Press.

External links edit

  • "The Parable of the Blobs and Squares", animated video, on why co-production matters.
  • Tijerino, Adamira (2014).
  • "Governance International - Homepage". Govint.org. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  • "Together we can change the rules to make the economy work for everyone". Neweconomics.org. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  • . 18 May 2011. Archived from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  • . 2 April 2016. Archived from the original on 2 April 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  • . 22 July 2011. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  • "Institute of Local Government Studies (INLOGOV) - School of Government and Society - University of Birmingham". Birmingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  • "Governance International - co-production". Govint.org. Retrieved 19 February 2019.

production, approach, production, coproduction, approach, development, delivery, public, services, technology, which, citizens, other, stakeholders, concepts, human, society, implicitly, involved, process, many, countries, production, increasingly, perceived, . Co production or coproduction is an approach in the development and delivery of public services and technology in which citizens and other key stakeholders and concepts in human society are implicitly involved in the process In many countries co production is increasingly perceived as a new public administration paradigm as it involves a whole new thinking about public service delivery and policy development 1 In co productive approaches citizens are not only consulted but are part of the conception design steering and ongoing management of services 2 The concept has a long history arising out of radical theories of knowledge in the 1970s and can be applied in a range of sectors across society including health research and science more broadly Contents 1 Definitions 2 Origins 3 Areas of application 3 1 Science technology and society 3 2 Co production of climate services 4 Concepts of co production 4 1 Co management 4 2 Co governance 4 3 Co design 4 4 Co delivery 4 5 Co assessment 4 6 Co produced knowledge 5 Challenges 6 Resources and examples 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Selected Co production Bibliography 10 External linksDefinitions editAn organisation called the Co production Network for Wales describes co production as an asset based approach to public services that enables people providing and people receiving services to share power and responsibility and to work together in equal reciprocal and caring relationships 3 According to Governance International co production is about public service organisations and citizens making better use of each other s assets resources and contributions 4 Co production is designed to address real world application of knowledge and forms part of what is termed Mode 2 of knowledge production which in the sociology of science is used to describe one of the ways that knowledge is formed 5 6 7 In Mode 2 science and technology studies move from extreme technological determinism and social constructivism to a more systemic understanding of how technology and society co produce each other Co production is functionally comparable to the concepts of causality loop positive feedback and co evolution all of which describe how two or more variables of a system affect and essentially create each other albeit with respect to different variables operating at different scales Origins editExperiments on co production on public services have been launched in many countries from Denmark to Malaysia the UK and the US 8 The term co production was originally coined in the late 1970s by Elinor Ostrom and colleagues at Indiana University to explain why neighbourhood crime rates went up in Chicago when the city s police officers retreated from the street into cars 9 10 Similarly to Jane Jacobs assessment of the importance of long time residents to the safety and vitality of New York s old neighbourhoods Ostrom noted that by becoming detached from people and their everyday lives on the streets Chicago s police force lost an essential source of insider information making it harder for them to do their work as effectively What Ostrom and her colleagues were recognising was that services in this case policing rely as much upon the unacknowledged knowledge assets and efforts of service users as the expertise of professional providers It was the informal understanding of local communities and the on the ground relationships they had developed with police officers that had helped keep crime levels down In short the police needed the community as much as the community needed the police The concept of the core economy first articulated by Neva Goodwin and subsequently developed by Edgar S Cahn is helpful in explaining this further The core economy is made up of all the resources embedded in people s everyday lives time energy wisdom experience knowledge and skills and the relationships between them love empathy watchfulness care reciprocity teaching and learning Similar to the role played by the operating system of a computer the core economy is the basic yet essential platform upon which specialist programmes in society the market economy and public services run Our specialised services dealing with crime education care health and so on are all underpinned by the family the neighbourhood community and civil society 9 This understanding has helped to radically reframe the potential role of users and professionals in the process of producing services Far from being passive consumers or needy drains on public finances people their family friends and communities are understood as important agents with the capacity to design and even deliver services with improved outcomes Professionals for their part need to find ways of engaging meaningfully with the core economy helping it to grow flourish and realise its full potential not atrophy as a result of neglect or exploitation Significantly as the New Economics Foundation NEF note This is not about consultation or participation except in the broadest sense The point is not to consult more or involve people more in decisions it is to encourage them to use the human skills and experience they have to help deliver public or voluntary services It is according to Elizabeth Hoodless at Community Service Volunteers about broadening and deepening public services so that they are no longer the preserve of professionals or commissioners but a shared responsibility both building and using a multi faceted network of mutual support 9 Areas of application editScience technology and society edit From a more science technology and society STS perspective Sheila Jasanoff has written that Co production is shorthand for the proposition that the ways in which we know and represent the world both nature and society are inseparable from the ways in which we chose to live in Co production draws on constitutive such as Actor network theory and interactional work such as the Edinburgh School in STS As a sensitizing concept the idiom of co production looks at four themes the emergence and stabilization of new techno scientific objects and framings the resolution of scientific and technical controversies the processes by which the products of techno science are made intelligible and portable across boundaries and the adjustment of science s cultural practices in response to the contexts in which science is done Studies employing co production often follow the following pathways making identities making institutions making discourses and making representations 11 Co production of climate services edit A disconnect exists between the climate information that is produced by science in terms of weather forecasts and climate projections and what is needed by users to make climate resilient decisions The mismatch usually relates to time scales spatial scales and metrics Co producing climate services by bringing together producers and users of climate information for dialogue can lead to the creation of new knowledge that is more appropriate for use in terms of being tailored and targeted to particular decisions As in other fields co production of climate services can create challenges due to differences in the incentives priorities and languages of the various parties often grouped into producers of information and users of information Although there are no recipes for how to co produce climate services there are a number of building blocks and principles 12 Concepts of co production editCo production is based on the production of own services and resources by citizens completely or in part 13 It involves the willingness of citizens or users together with public services to design implement and improve the delivery of services in order to innovate and transform public services 14 Co management edit The concept of co management implies the introduction of a third party citizens users private organization or other public organization into the process of management of the delivery of the service 13 The involvement of the third party actually takes place from the nineteenth century however it was not defined as a concept back then Co management creates the phenomenon by bringing relations between different organizations to internal production process and creating new networks which in some cases brings strong positive impact however can be seen as negative due to the lack of accountability and increasing competition between different networks 15 Co governance edit The concept of co governance lies under the arrangement of the third party and public agencies if decision making and planning of public services 13 Co design edit Co designing refers to the process of a collective knowledge sharing and knowledge creation 16 Key components of a co design process can involve 17 Intentionally involving target users in designing solutions Postponing design decisions until after gathering feedback Synthesising feedback from target users into insights Developing solutions based on feedback Co delivery edit Co delivery implies the improvement of outcomes with a collective effort It is usually implemented as non profit organization 18 Co assessment edit Co assessment refers to the monitoring of public service quality and outcomes 18 Co assessment of public services brings a radically different perspective to deciding what works and what doesn t 19 However co assessment can carry potential risks such as lack of knowledge lack of resources time consumption Co produced knowledge edit Scholars have discussed the role of co production in decolonising research and implementation of services by including a mixture of research state and public community stakeholders in the process a process that results in strong mutual ownership 20 Particularly this has been linked to the triangle that moves the mountain approach for addressing social challenges originally developed in Thailand 21 Challenges editCo production as a method approach and mind set is very different from traditional models of service provision As has been shown it fundamentally alters the relationship between service providers and users it emphasises people as active agents not passive beneficiaries and in large part because of this alternative process it tends to lead towards better more preventative outcomes in the long term Because of its radically different nature however people wishing to practice co production face a number of significant challenges As NEF NESTA comments Overall the challenge seems to amount to one clear problem Co production even in the most successful and dramatic examples barely fits the standard shape of public services or charities or the systems we have developed to deliver support even though in the UK policy documents express ambitions to empower and engage local communities to devolve power and increase individuals choice and control 22 23 This misfit makes practising co production difficult and mainstreaming good practice particularly so Existing structures and frameworks work against not with co production In order for it to flourish as a viable alternative to the expensive and in many cases failing status quo change needs to take place NEF NESTA highlight four areas where such change will be required Funding and Commissioning Commissioners of public money will need to change their established ways of doing things Applying strict quantitative targets and stipulating rigid short term outputs with a mind to economic efficiency acts as a barrier to co produced service models In order to commission for change narrow outputs need to be broadened and complemented by outcomes based commissioning Generating evidence and making the case for co production The obvious reason why many commissioning frameworks favour outputs over outcomes is that they are simply measured making it deceptively easy to evaluate success or failure But real success is not easily measurable Nor are many of the preventative benefits of co production easy to quantify Making the case for co production and capturing its complex and myriad benefits is a key challenge Taking successful approaches to scale It is fair to say that the majority of examples where co production is being successfully practiced take place at a local scale To a great extent this has been instrumental to their success they are rooted in local realities have grown organically from the ground based on local assets and ideas and emphasise the importance of face to face relationships There is a potential tension to be overcome here ensuring that a service remains locally rooted whilst simultaneously expanding the scope of coverage nationally Where this has been achieved see KeyRing Shared Lives and LAC in Australia the tendency towards replication and blueprinting has been strongly resisted Instead of simplistically transplanting a model in new regions these organisations have taken forward a common method that involves engaging with local assets and resources in a consistent way Co production also suits smaller organisations traditionally those in the third sector that are more used to working in less structured and hierarchical ways This is something that large public sector structures are much less used to doing If co production is to be a mainstream way of working across public sector services a structural and cultural shift will also need to take place Developing required professional skills Years of working to narrowly defined roles and job descriptions has understandably led to many public service professionals seeing their clients through circumscribed lenses as patients that need to be cared for rather than people who could be enabled It can also be difficult for any professional to relinquish control and hand over the stick not only does this challenge occupational identities but it also confers a greater sense of risk co production can be messy and is inimical to rigid control If the hearts and minds of those delivering services on the ground cannot be changed and if the necessary skills associated with relinquishing control are not embedded co production is likely to be constrained Resources and examples editInteractive Good Practice Co Production Catalogue from Wales The coproduced Marco Calvallo Mental Health Center Skills for Health Work with people and significant others to develop services to improve their mental health Co Production Network Co production Wales All in this together Parents as Pre school Education Service Co producers in Lithuania Co production Enhancing the role of citizens in governance and service delivery EU 2018 See also editParticipatory development Participatory action researchNotes edit Putans R Zeibote Z 2021 Public services client accordance through co production and digitalization European Studies the review of European Law Economics and Politics 28 1 p 127 147 ISSN 1805 8809 Available at https caes upol cz wp content uploads 2021 08 121 147 Putans Zeibote pdf article Christian Bason Leading public sector innovation Co creating for a better society Bristol Policy Press 2010 Co production Network for Wales Governance International Michael Gibbons Camille Limoges Helga Nowotny Simon Schwartzman Peter Scott and Martin Trow The New Production of Knowledge The dynamics of science and research in contemporary societies Sage 1994 Jasanoff Sheila States of Knowledge The Co Production of Science and the Social Order Routledge 2004 ISBN 978 0 415 40329 0 Harbers Hans Inside the Politics of Technology Agency and Normativity in the Co Production of Technology and Society Amsterdam University Press 2005 ISBN 978 90 5356 756 2 Paul Scriven 13 November 2012 International focus public service co production around the world Guardian Professional Guardian News and Media Limited Retrieved 2014 01 05 a b c new economics foundation 2008 Co production A manifesto for growing the core economy The new economics foundation NESTA 2009 The Challenge of Co production Jasanoff Sheila States of Knowledge The Co Production of Science and the Social Order Archived 2015 04 09 at the Wayback Machine Routledge 2004 Carter Suzanne Steynor Anna Vincent Katharine Visman Emma Waagsaether Katinka L 2019 Co production in African weather and climate services Manual PDF WISER and Future Climate For Africa a b c Pestoff Victor 2013 06 19 Pestoff Victor Brandsen Taco Verschuere Bram eds New Public Governance the Third Sector and Co Production doi 10 4324 9780203152294 ISBN 9780203152294 Osborne Stephen P Strokosch Kirsty September 2013 It takes Two to Tango Understanding the Co production of Public Services by Integrating the Services Management and Public Administration Perspectives It takes Two to Tango PDF British Journal of Management 24 S31 S47 doi 10 1111 1467 8551 12010 hdl 20 500 11820 5d295c9e c567 42f2 9ab5 cec727850dc4 S2CID 153893466 Brandsen Taco Hout Eelco van December 2006 Co management in public service networks The organizational effects Public Management Review 8 4 537 549 doi 10 1080 14719030601022908 ISSN 1471 9037 S2CID 154024742 Sanders Elizabeth B N Stappers Pieter Jan March 2008 Co creation and the new landscapes of design CoDesign 4 1 5 18 doi 10 1080 15710880701875068 ISSN 1571 0882 Guide to co design Roadmap to Informed Communities communities sunlightfoundation com Retrieved 2020 01 10 a b CitizenPoweredCities Co producing better public services with citizens OPSI www oecd org Retrieved 2020 01 08 Governance International CO ASSESS www govint org Retrieved 2020 01 10 Heath Cai Mormina Maru 2022 08 01 Moving from Collaboration to Co production in International Research The European Journal of Development Research 34 4 1704 1715 doi 10 1057 s41287 022 00552 y ISSN 1743 9728 Tangcharoensathien Viroj Sirilak Supakit Sritara Piyamitr Patcharanarumol Walaiporn Lekagul Angkana Isaranuwatchai Wanrudee Wittayapipopsakul Woranan Chandrasiri Orana 2021 02 16 Co production of evidence for policies in Thailand from concept to action BMJ 372 m4669 doi 10 1136 bmj m4669 ISSN 1756 1833 PMC 7879270 PMID 33593790 NESTA Co production will be biggest public service revolution since the Beveridge Report Archived from the original on 2011 06 04 Retrieved 2011 03 08 PSCA International Ltd Public Service Reviews Publicservice co uk Archived from the original on 26 March 2012 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Selected Co production Bibliography editAlford J 1998 A public management road less traveled clients as co producers of public services Australian Journal of Public Administration 57 4 128 137 Alford J 2007 Engaging public sector clients from service delivery to co production Houndmills Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan Barnes M Harrison S Mort M Shardlow P and Wistow G 1999 The new management of community care users groups citizenship and co production in G Stoker New Management of British Local Governance Houndmills Macmillan Tony Bovaird 2007 Beyond engagement and participation user and community co production of public services Public Administration Review 67 5 846 860 2007 Tony Bovaird and Elke Loeffler 2010 User and community co production of public services and public policies through collective decision making the role of emerging technologies in T Brandsen and Marc Holzer Eds The Future of Governance Newark NJ National Center for Public Performance Tony Bovaird and Elke Loeffler 2012 From Engagement to Co production How Users and Communities Contribute to Public Services in Taco Brandsen and Victor Pestoff Eds New Public Governance the Third Sector and Co Production London Routledge Matthew Horne and Tom Shirley 2009 Co production in public services a new partnership with citizens London Cabinet Office Roger Dunston Alison Lee David Boud Pat Brodie and Mary Chiarella 2008 Co Production and Health System Reform From Re Imagining To Re Making Australian Journal of Public Administration 68 1 39 52 Elke Loffler Tony Bovaird Salvador Parrado and Greg van Ryzin 2008 If you want to go fast walk alone If you want to go far walk together Citizens and the co production of public services Report to the EU Presidency Paris Ministry of Finance Budget and Public Services Brudney J and England R 1983 Towards a definition of the co production concept Public Administration Review 43 10 59 65 Cahn E S 2001 No More Throw Away People the Co Production Imperative Washington DC Essential Books Hyde P and Davies H T O 2004 Service design culture and performance collusion and co production in health care Human Relations 57 1 1407 1426 Joshi A and Moore M 2003 Institutionalised Co production Unorthodox Public Service Delivery in Challenging Environments Brighton IDS Kretzmann J and McKnight J 1993 Building Communities from the Inside Out A Path Toward Finding and Mobilizing a Community s Assets Lovelock C and Young R F 1979 Look to customers to increase productivity Harvard Business Review 57 May June 168 178 Needham C 2009 Co production an emerging evidence base for adult social care transformation SCIE Research Briefing 31 London Social Care Institute for Excellence Richard Normann 1984 Service Management Strategy and Leadership in the Service Business John Wiley and Sons Ostrom E 1996 Crossing the great divide coproduction synergy and development World Development 24 6 1073 87 Parks R B et al 1981 Consumers as coproducers of public services some economic and institutional considerations Policy Studies Journal 9 Summer 1 001 11 Percy S 1984 Citizen participation in the co production of urban services Urban Affairs Quarterly 19 4 431 446 Pestoff V and Brandsen T 2007 Co production the third sector and the delivery of public services London Routledge Pocobello R Sehity T el Negrogno L Minervini C Guida M amp Venerito C n d Comparison of a co produced mental health service to traditional services A co produced mixed methods cross sectional study International Journal of Mental Health Nursing n a n a https doi org 10 1111 inm 12681 Ramirez R 1999 Value co production intellectual origins and implications for practice and research Strategic Management Journal 20 1 49 65 Sharp E 1980 Towards a new understanding of urban services and citizen participation the co production concept Midwest Review of Public Administration 14 105 118 Walker P 2002 Co production In Mayo E and Moore H eds Building the Mutual State Findings from Virtual Thinktank London New Economics Foundation Warren R Harlow K S and Rosentraub M S 1982 Citizen participation in services methodological and policy issues in co production research Southwestern Review of Management and Economics 2 41 55 Whitaker G 1980 Co production citizen participation in service delivery Public Administration Review 40 240 246 Wickstrom S 1996 The customer as co producer European Journal of Marketing 30 4 6 19 Zeleny M 1978 Towards Self Service Society New York Columbia University Press External links edit The Parable of the Blobs and Squares animated video on why co production matters Tijerino Adamira 2014 Video Governance International Homepage Govint org Retrieved 19 February 2019 Together we can change the rules to make the economy work for everyone Neweconomics org Retrieved 19 February 2019 Public Service Co Production Value For People 18 May 2011 Archived from the original on 18 May 2011 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Frankie Hine Hughes s Page Fiery Spirits Community of Practice 2 April 2016 Archived from the original on 2 April 2016 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Is there a third wave of change Public Service 22 July 2011 Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Institute of Local Government Studies INLOGOV School of Government and Society University of Birmingham Birmingham ac uk Retrieved 19 February 2019 Governance International co production Govint org Retrieved 19 February 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Co production approach amp oldid 1223010100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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