Institutional logics of service provision: The national and urban governance of activation policies in three European countries
Fuertes, Vanesa ; McQuaid, Ronald W. ; Heidenreich, Martin
Journal of European Social Policy
2021
31
1
February
92-107
labour market policy ; activation ; employment policy ; urban area
Labour market
https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0958928720974178
English
Bibliogr.
"Labour market activation policies aimed at those with multiple barriers to employment require inter-agency collaboration between local organizations providing social and employment services. This local collaborative context is shaped by different institutional logics (state, markets, professions and community) that are crucial for policy implementation. Using case studies of nine German, UK and Swedish cities, it is argued that different institutional logics help shape the form and operation of local collaboration between different agencies and actors and thus the concrete support for service users at the local level. Although all three countries are characterized by centralized employment policies, each city shows a prevalence, but not exclusivity, of certain institutional logics over others. These differences, partly reflecting the local context, are likely to lead to local variations in understandings of solidarity, policy implementation, inter-agency collaboration and networks of actors and national–local tensions. The paper suggests that an institutional logics approach provides a useful framework for helping to understand local variations and potential national–local policy conflicts."
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