Citizen Participation in the Age of Contracting: When Service Delivery Trumps Democracy
ISBN: 9781315146577
Platform/Publisher: Taylor & Francis / Routledge
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited



Citizen Participation in the Age of Contracting is based on a simple premise: in democracies, power originates with citizens. While citizen participation in government remains a central tenet of democracy, public service delivery structures are considerably more complex today than they were fifty years ago.

Today, governments contract with private organizations to deliver a wide array of services. Yet, we know very little about how citizens influence government decisions and policies in the "hollow state." Based on nearly 100 interviews with public and private managers, our findings about the state of citizen participation in contract governance are somewhat disheartening. Public and private organizations engaged citizens in a number of ways. However, most of their efforts failed to shift the power structure in communities and did not give citizens a chance to fundamentally shape local priorities and programs. Instead, elected officials and professional staff largely maintained control over significant policy and administrative decisions. Widespread, but narrow in their forms and impact, the participation practices we uncovered did not live up to the ideals of democracy and self-governance.

Citizen Participation in the Age of Contracting is suitable for those who study public administration, as well as in other closely related fields such as nonprofit management and organizational behavior.


Anna A. Amirkhanyan is Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy at American University. Her research and teaching focus on public and nonprofit management, privatization, performance, citizen engagement, and social policy. She is the author of many peer-reviewed research articles and book chapters, including publications in the Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, Public Administration Review, Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, and the Journal of Policy Analysis and Managemen t. She served on the Board of Directors for the Public Management Research Association and is on the Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 's editorial board.

Kristina T. Lambright is Associate Professor of Public Administration at Binghamton University. Her research interests include cross-organizational service delivery structures, contracting, organizational performance, and campus-based civic engagement. She has published several articles in a cross-section of prominent public administration and nonprofit management journals and serves on the editorial boards of Public Administration Review, the Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, The American Review of Public Administration, and the Journal of Public Affairs Education .

hidden image for function call