Public Management & Governance
@pubgovman.bsky.social
Institute for Public Management & Governance,
at Vienna University of Economics and Business
at Vienna University of Economics and Business
Topic: The case against co-production as a silver bullet: Why and when citizensshould notbe involved in public service delivery
doi.org/10.60733/PMG...
doi.org/10.60733/PMG...
The case against co-production as a silver bullet: Why and when citizens should not be involved in public service delivery
Co-production refers to the collaboration of public service professionals and citizens / service users in the design and delivery of public services, which is said to make services more effective, dem...
doi.org
July 31, 2025 at 9:29 AM
Topic: The case against co-production as a silver bullet: Why and when citizensshould notbe involved in public service delivery
doi.org/10.60733/PMG...
doi.org/10.60733/PMG...
July 28, 2025 at 2:24 PM
*In fact, it was rather yelling than talking... #WorstAccousticsEver at #AOM2025.
July 28, 2025 at 6:57 AM
*In fact, it was rather yelling than talking... #WorstAccousticsEver at #AOM2025.
Reposted by Public Management & Governance
We continue by talking on how to create trust in management relationships, as well as in care relationships with patients... Two very different relationships to be balanced well in hospitals. #DirkBuyens @vlerick.bsky.social
April 3, 2025 at 9:31 AM
We continue by talking on how to create trust in management relationships, as well as in care relationships with patients... Two very different relationships to be balanced well in hospitals. #DirkBuyens @vlerick.bsky.social
Finally, the study enhances the scholarly understanding of entrepreneurial social capital by identifying the context-specific, idiosyncratic mechanisms through which women entrepreneurs at the base of the pyramid develop social capital.
(8/👵🏼)
(8/👵🏼)
March 4, 2025 at 11:12 AM
Finally, the study enhances the scholarly understanding of entrepreneurial social capital by identifying the context-specific, idiosyncratic mechanisms through which women entrepreneurs at the base of the pyramid develop social capital.
(8/👵🏼)
(8/👵🏼)
In addition, this study advances the scholarly debates on how entrepreneurship is shaped by #gender and social #inequalities.
(7/👩🏾🦱)
doi.org/10.1080/0898...
(7/👩🏾🦱)
doi.org/10.1080/0898...
Building social capital to escape poverty: an intersectionality perspective on women’s entrepreneurship at the base of the pyramid
Despite the abundance of entrepreneurship research on the benefits of social capital (SC) for new businesses, little attention has been devoted to its role in women’s entrepreneurship at the base o...
doi.org
March 4, 2025 at 11:12 AM
In addition, this study advances the scholarly debates on how entrepreneurship is shaped by #gender and social #inequalities.
(7/👩🏾🦱)
doi.org/10.1080/0898...
(7/👩🏾🦱)
doi.org/10.1080/0898...
By doing so, the study responds to calls for exploring strategies and means that entrepreneurs in poverty use to engage with and alter complex institutional contexts.
(6/👩🦲)
(6/👩🦲)
March 4, 2025 at 11:12 AM
By doing so, the study responds to calls for exploring strategies and means that entrepreneurs in poverty use to engage with and alter complex institutional contexts.
(6/👩🦲)
(6/👩🦲)
Furthermore, Trivedi, Petkova, and Willems identify multiple benefits of using these approaches to develop and access social capital, both for the entrepreneurs and for their #communities.
(5/👩🦳)
(5/👩🦳)
March 4, 2025 at 11:12 AM
Furthermore, Trivedi, Petkova, and Willems identify multiple benefits of using these approaches to develop and access social capital, both for the entrepreneurs and for their #communities.
(5/👩🦳)
(5/👩🦳)
Using inductive qualitative analysis, Trivedi, Petkova, and Willems identify three mechanisms through which such entrepreneurs develop social capital: crossing traditional boundaries, navigating within the constraints of gendered roles, and developing an entrepreneurial ‘sisterhood’.
(4/👩🏼🦰)
(4/👩🏼🦰)
Building social capital to escape poverty: an intersectionality perspective on women’s entrepreneurship at the base of the pyramid
Despite the abundance of entrepreneurship research on the benefits of social capital (SC) for new businesses, little attention has been devoted to its role in women’s entrepreneurship at the base o...
doi.org
March 4, 2025 at 11:12 AM
Using inductive qualitative analysis, Trivedi, Petkova, and Willems identify three mechanisms through which such entrepreneurs develop social capital: crossing traditional boundaries, navigating within the constraints of gendered roles, and developing an entrepreneurial ‘sisterhood’.
(4/👩🏼🦰)
(4/👩🏼🦰)