Third sector organisations (TSO’s) increasingly provide alternatives to public services, manage community ownership of local assets, and offer relational models of production and exchange. Many TSO’s have relatively flat structures, valorise peer relations and are seen as a democratic alternative to local state bureaucracies. This chapter draws on two empirical case studies to argue that a psychosocial understanding of lateral peer relations is essential if displacement anxiety and rivalry are to be avoided and conflict used as productive feedback for organisational development. Taking the UK as an example, and a context where the functions of local authorities have been sufficiently curtailed, it concludes that TSO’s may still need the ver...
This study explores the generally prevailing diagnosis of 'hybridisation' in the third sector under ...
Third sector organisations deliver a range of public services for government. They are valued and tr...
Organisations are never static; they are changing all the time. Unsurprisingly, actors in ‘third sec...
Against the background of the current shift from government to governance, relationships between thi...
Using interview and documentary empirical evidence from leaders of a local community group that took...
In Britain, the former Labour government employed a range of collaborative governance initiatives to...
The potential of governance through partnerships and the third sector to solve state and market fail...
Most third sector organizations [TSOs] aim to deliver social and public services which are inadequat...
The potential of governance through partnerships and the third sector to solve state and market fail...
In the UK the delivery of public services has changed over the last 25 years. This role has moved fr...
The object of this paper is to go deeper into some aspects related to the relationships between the ...
Organising that is separate from state and market orgamsmg is variously called voluntary, nonprofit,...
In the last decade, UK public agencies have increasingly been required to collaborate with non-state...
In Britain, the former Labour government employed a range of collaborative governance initiatives to...
This paper uses data from the national survey of third-sector organisations in England to show, for ...
This study explores the generally prevailing diagnosis of 'hybridisation' in the third sector under ...
Third sector organisations deliver a range of public services for government. They are valued and tr...
Organisations are never static; they are changing all the time. Unsurprisingly, actors in ‘third sec...
Against the background of the current shift from government to governance, relationships between thi...
Using interview and documentary empirical evidence from leaders of a local community group that took...
In Britain, the former Labour government employed a range of collaborative governance initiatives to...
The potential of governance through partnerships and the third sector to solve state and market fail...
Most third sector organizations [TSOs] aim to deliver social and public services which are inadequat...
The potential of governance through partnerships and the third sector to solve state and market fail...
In the UK the delivery of public services has changed over the last 25 years. This role has moved fr...
The object of this paper is to go deeper into some aspects related to the relationships between the ...
Organising that is separate from state and market orgamsmg is variously called voluntary, nonprofit,...
In the last decade, UK public agencies have increasingly been required to collaborate with non-state...
In Britain, the former Labour government employed a range of collaborative governance initiatives to...
This paper uses data from the national survey of third-sector organisations in England to show, for ...
This study explores the generally prevailing diagnosis of 'hybridisation' in the third sector under ...
Third sector organisations deliver a range of public services for government. They are valued and tr...
Organisations are never static; they are changing all the time. Unsurprisingly, actors in ‘third sec...