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Working Paper 21: Abstract
Regulating Coexistence in the New Political-Economy: Cross-Sector Collaboration in a Workforce Development Approach
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Private non-profit organizations are
increasingly assuming key roles as human service providers within
the new political economy. This paper aims to contribute to our
understandings of how the participation of nonprofit intermediaries
can modify the outcomes of the market and how such participation
dynamically relates to policy and regulation. Developing an
integrated approach to the question of sectoral difference and
cross-sector collaboration, the paper focuses on the challenge of
reform and sustainability in a particular social field -- Workforce
Development -- situated at the intersection of law, market, and
society. In an era of privatization, welfare-to-work reforms, and a
devolution revolution, government agencies must often decide
whether to support and cooperate with for-profit or nonprofit
intermediaries, and how to structure the relations between them.
Often, through newly adopted voucher systems, the choice is left to
individual consumers to decide between service providers that vary
in organizational form. Focusing on the emerging roles of
non-profits as they respond to the changing realities of work and
service provision, the paper questions conventional assumptions
about divisions between sectors. In particular, the paper analyzes a
series of quantitative and qualitative studies on differences in
performance among publicly funded vocational training providers. By
comparing the complex circumstances in which nonprofit initiatives
in a mixed industry produce interventionist and redistributional
effects with those in which organizational form seems insignificant,
the goal is to provide a better normative understanding of the
comparative advantage of different organizational forms in changing
social contexts. |
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