Public corporate actors – governments, government bureaucracies, and nongovernmental organizations strongly involved in the delivery of public services – address key social problems in society. They permeate many dimensions of our personal lives. They impact our health care, education, and social security. Yet, instances of policy failure and organizational mismanagement are numerous, and the global economic and financial crisis places pressure on public corporate actors to deliver services more efficiently and effectively. Under what conditions, then, do public corporate actors perform well? This book argues that public corporate actors do not operate in a vacuum: they are dependent on other actors in their environment to achieve their goa...