Transformational Community Engagement in Urban Infrastructure Public-Private Partnerships: A Governmentality Approach to Create Social Value
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Social Value of Urban Infrastructures
2.2. Interdependency of Community Engagement and Social Value
3. Research Methodology
4. Defining the Key Construct of the Governmentality Framework for TCE
4.1. Condition 1: Organised and Enabled Community Stakeholders
4.2. Condition 2: The Centrality of the National Institutional Environment
4.3. Condition 3: Urban Infrastructures PPPs as Hybrid Organizations
5. Theoretical Underpinning: Governmentality
- Empower, organize, and enable communities to become definitive stakeholders.
- Enable national institutions to play a direction-setting role through a mix of supportive policies, standards, regulations and incentive mechanisms that attract private sector participation and community involvement in urban infrastructure development.
- Frame urban infrastructure PPPs as hybrid organizations with a business model that is market-oriented but mission-centred on social value creation within a defined urban area.
6. Discussion
- What are the features and dimensions of the embedded institutions, such as shared beliefs, societal norms, and values? How do these embedded institutions shape involved actors (communities, private sector partners, etc.) attitudes, perceptions, and willingness to participate in community engagement and collaborate to create social value?
- What is the general nature of a country’s institutional environment (property rights, political and administrative systems, sector legislation) and how does this shape actors’ openness and motivation to engage with communities in a transformational manner?
- What are the dominant policy regimes (national and sub-national) in a country’s urban space? How do they influence or shape the governance of urban infrastructures? What are their origins? How open are they to change?
- How does the state steer multiple actors to deliver urban infrastructure and other related public services?
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Starter Sets | Theme Identified | Source | Theme Adopted | Analytical Focus |
---|---|---|---|---|
[8,14,16] | The community should be organized or empowered | [35,36] | The community as a definitive stakeholder | Mental mode or shared beliefs that influence the subjective perception of communities |
An enabling institutional environment | [37,38] | The centrality of national institution environment | How far does the institutional environment in a country, composed of its political, judicial, international, and regulatory institutions, affect community engagement | |
A hybrid form of organizing with an emphasis on social value combined with the pursuit of economic value | [39] | Urban infrastructure PPPs as hybrid organizations | How to obtain the governance structure right; who is in and who is out and when |
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Afieroho, U.E.; Li, Y.; Han, Y.; Soomro, M.A.; Radujkovic, M. Transformational Community Engagement in Urban Infrastructure Public-Private Partnerships: A Governmentality Approach to Create Social Value. Buildings 2023, 13, 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13051225
Afieroho UE, Li Y, Han Y, Soomro MA, Radujkovic M. Transformational Community Engagement in Urban Infrastructure Public-Private Partnerships: A Governmentality Approach to Create Social Value. Buildings. 2023; 13(5):1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13051225
Chicago/Turabian StyleAfieroho, Ulohomuno Eze, Yongkui Li, Yilong Han, Mohsin Ali Soomro, and Mladen Radujkovic. 2023. "Transformational Community Engagement in Urban Infrastructure Public-Private Partnerships: A Governmentality Approach to Create Social Value" Buildings 13, no. 5: 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13051225
APA StyleAfieroho, U. E., Li, Y., Han, Y., Soomro, M. A., & Radujkovic, M. (2023). Transformational Community Engagement in Urban Infrastructure Public-Private Partnerships: A Governmentality Approach to Create Social Value. Buildings, 13(5), 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13051225