This work unites international contributors in management law, organizational behavior, public management, business administration, economics, and accounting. They address issues and unresolved questions related to hybrid organizations that mix public and private elements to deliver public goods and services. Hybrid organizations are defined as organizations that combine managerial features, value systems, and institutional logics of different sectors, such as market, state, and civil society. Themes of the book include accountability and transparency, sector-specific challenges, and nonprofit governance. Examples and cases are presented from different national contexts and policy sectors. Some specific topics include the influence of human resources practices on corruption behavior in humanitarian aid, public management and hybridity in healthcare, strategic philanthropy in foundations, and collaboration between for-profit and non-profit organizations.
- Annotation ©2018, (protoview.com)
Considering the hybrid phenomenon as a whole, little is known about governance and controls, especially with regard to accountability mechanisms and issues such as the prevention of corruption. Even less is known when we consider the main variables of hybridity to be mixed ownership, competing institutional logics, multiplicity of funding arrangements, and public and private forms of financial and social control.
This book seeks to answer the unsolved questions related to hybrid organisations. It does so by adopting a multifaceted approach along its ten chapters, which focus on different national contexts, including the UK, Italy, Australia, and Sweden, as well as global organisations. The authors consider policy sectors including humanitarian aid, local transport, healthcare, and welfare services.