
Contracting for Public Value
New Thinking for More Effective, Accountable, and Sustainable Public Service Contracts
Oxford University Press Inc
Will be published approx. on 2. June 2026
Book
Hardback
208 pages
978-0-19-776312-4 (ISBN)
Description
Public-private partnerships (PPPs) play an increasingly central role in the delivery of public services worldwide, promoting long-term institutional cooperation through multisector partnerships. If well-structured and managed, PPPs offer the opportunity to expand public service capacities while sharing financial and operational risks and responsibilities with private partners. Yet many PPPs experience conflict and fail, squandering public resources and falling short in serving the public interest.
Contracting for Public Value extensively analyzes the contractual arrangements and relationships that serve as the scaffolding for PPPs, and how they can be designed, developed, and managed to promote more effective, accountable, and sustainable partnerships for public services delivery. The book focuses on two in-depth case studies of complex, multiactor PPPs--one in the United States and one in the United Kingdom--that employed outcomes-based contracts in arranging for service provision to vulnerable populations. Drawing on multiple theoretical models, the book characterizes the organizational structures, contractual features, and exchange relationships among the respective sets of PPP partners. It presents theory-informed, comparative analyses using rich case-study data to illuminate how the formal and relational contract features structured the collaborations and either supported or impeded the success of the PPPs. The analysis generates new knowledge that challenges the predominance of the traditional formal contract that has governed most PPPs and introduces new thinking about relational contracting and systems change to enhance the success of PPPs.
Practitioners will derive specific, original guidance and examples from this book on how to champion public value in designing and executing a PPP contract, center relationship building and fortify PPPs with effective institutional and accountability mechanisms, and sustain long-term, public-private collaboration.
Contracting for Public Value extensively analyzes the contractual arrangements and relationships that serve as the scaffolding for PPPs, and how they can be designed, developed, and managed to promote more effective, accountable, and sustainable partnerships for public services delivery. The book focuses on two in-depth case studies of complex, multiactor PPPs--one in the United States and one in the United Kingdom--that employed outcomes-based contracts in arranging for service provision to vulnerable populations. Drawing on multiple theoretical models, the book characterizes the organizational structures, contractual features, and exchange relationships among the respective sets of PPP partners. It presents theory-informed, comparative analyses using rich case-study data to illuminate how the formal and relational contract features structured the collaborations and either supported or impeded the success of the PPPs. The analysis generates new knowledge that challenges the predominance of the traditional formal contract that has governed most PPPs and introduces new thinking about relational contracting and systems change to enhance the success of PPPs.
Practitioners will derive specific, original guidance and examples from this book on how to champion public value in designing and executing a PPP contract, center relationship building and fortify PPPs with effective institutional and accountability mechanisms, and sustain long-term, public-private collaboration.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Illustrations
11 b/w figures
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 14 mm
Weight
517 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-776312-4 (9780197763124)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Carolyn Heinrich is a University Distinguished Professor of Leadership, Policy, and Organizations and Political Science and the Patricia and Rodes Hart Professor of Public Policy, Education and Economics at Vanderbilt University. She holds secondary appointments in Economics and in Health Policy in the School of Medicine. Her research focuses on education, workforce development, health and social welfare policy, and public management.
Deanna Malatesta is an associate professor at Indiana University's O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Her research focuses on public-private partnerships, inter-organizational collaboration, and contract governance. She earned her MPA from Rutgers University-Camden and her doctorate from the University of Georgia. She is a coauthor of the widely acclaimed public management textbook Understanding and Managing Public Organizations.
Eleanor Carter is a UKRI Future Leaders Research Fellow at the University of Oxford Blavatnik School
of Government and the academic co-director of the Government Outcomes Lab. Her research explores the potential of novel contracting arrangements, such as social outcomes contracts and impact bonds, to facilitate purposeful partnerships and effective services.
Michael Gibson is a DPhil student in public policy and research and a policy associate with the Government Outcomes Lab at the Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford. His research explores how trust between partners can be built and reconciled with the need for public accountability, and the role that different public values might play in influencing this.
Nigel Ball is the director of Social Purpose Lab at University of the Arts London. He has extensive experience in the field of social change spanning government, social enterprise, and academia. He has built a career taking new projects and ideas and making them real, spanning a long succession of leadership roles. He was instrumental in the development of Oxford
University's Government Outcomes Lab, and its annual Social Outcomes Conference.
Deanna Malatesta is an associate professor at Indiana University's O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Her research focuses on public-private partnerships, inter-organizational collaboration, and contract governance. She earned her MPA from Rutgers University-Camden and her doctorate from the University of Georgia. She is a coauthor of the widely acclaimed public management textbook Understanding and Managing Public Organizations.
Eleanor Carter is a UKRI Future Leaders Research Fellow at the University of Oxford Blavatnik School
of Government and the academic co-director of the Government Outcomes Lab. Her research explores the potential of novel contracting arrangements, such as social outcomes contracts and impact bonds, to facilitate purposeful partnerships and effective services.
Michael Gibson is a DPhil student in public policy and research and a policy associate with the Government Outcomes Lab at the Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford. His research explores how trust between partners can be built and reconciled with the need for public accountability, and the role that different public values might play in influencing this.
Nigel Ball is the director of Social Purpose Lab at University of the Arts London. He has extensive experience in the field of social change spanning government, social enterprise, and academia. He has built a career taking new projects and ideas and making them real, spanning a long succession of leadership roles. He was instrumental in the development of Oxford
University's Government Outcomes Lab, and its annual Social Outcomes Conference.
Author
Patricia and Rodes Hart Professor of Public Policy, Education, Economics and Health Policy and University Distinguished Professor of Leadership, Policy and Organizations and Political SciencePatricia and Rodes Hart Professor of Public Policy, Education, Economics and Health Policy and University Distinguished Professor of Leadership, Policy and Organizations and Political Science, Vanderbilt University
Associate ProfessorAssociate Professor, O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University
Academic Co-DirectorAcademic Co-Director, Government Outcomes Lab, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford
DPhil Student and Research and Policy AssociateDPhil Student and Research and Policy Associate, Government Outcomes Lab, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford
DirectorDirector, Social Purpose Lab, University of the Arts London
Content
- 1: Crafting Public-Private Partnerships that Champion What is Good for and Valued by the Public
- 2: Contractual Pathways to Sustained Public-Private Partnership Collaboration and Success
- 3: Two High-Profile Public-Private Partnerships on the Spectrum from Formal to Relational
- 4: Analysis of a March Down Different Paths to Public-Private Partnership Failure Versus Success
- 5: Performance and Accountability
- 6: New Thinking for More Effective, Accountable, and Sustainable Public-Private Partnerships
- Appendix 1: Clauses Potentially Undermining Public Value
- Appendix 2: Translating Public Values to PPP Contract Design and Practice
- Appendix 3: Translating Judicial Insights into Language for PPP Contracts