Turbocharging Networks in the Public Sector


Autoria(s): Brown, Kerry; Keast, Robyn; Waterhouse, Jennifer Marie
Contribuinte(s)

Easterby-Smith, M

Sako, M

Data(s)

2005

Resumo

Networks have come to occupy a key position in the strategic armoury of the government, business and community sectors and now have impact on a broad array of policy and management arenas. An emphasis on relationships, trust and mutuality mean that networks function on a different operating logic to the conventional processes of government and business. It is therefore important that organizational members of networks are able to adopt the skills and culture necessary to operate successfully under these distinctive kinds of arrangements. Because networks function from a different operational logic to traditional bureaucracies, public sector organizations may experience difficulties in adapting to networked arrangements. Networks are formed to address a variety of social problems or meet capability gaps within organizations. As such they are often under pressure to quickly produce measurable outcomes and need to form rapidly and come to full operation quickly. This paper presents a theoretical exploration of how diverse types of networks are required for different management and policy situations and draws on a set of public sector case studies to understand/demonstrate how these various types of networked arrangements may be ‘turbo-charged’ so that they more quickly adopt the characteristics necessary to deliver required outcomes.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/24459/

Publicador

British Academy of Management

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/24459/1/24459_brown_2006000884.pdf

Brown, Kerry, Keast, Robyn, & Waterhouse, Jennifer Marie (2005) Turbocharging Networks in the Public Sector. In Easterby-Smith, M & Sako, M (Eds.) Challenges of Organisations in Global Markets: Conference Proceedings 2005 British Academy of Management, British Academy of Management, Oxford, UK, pp. 1-18.

Fonte

QUT Business School

Palavras-Chave #160509 Public Administration #Public Sector Management, Networks
Tipo

Conference Paper