282 research outputs found
Privatisation, contracting-out and inter-municipal cooperation: new developments in local public service delivery
We briefly review recent advances in the empirical analysis of the privatisation and inter-municipal cooperation of local public services and discuss the potential of these studies. The core issues examined include the identification of factors driving delivery choices and the effects of privatisation and cooperation on service provisions. In addition to reporting the specific empirical findings of each study, we highlight the innovative methodologies that they each adopt. Finally, we outline a number of potential avenues for further research
Re-municipalization of public services: trend or hype?
Re-municipalization is part of a broader set of reverse privatization
reforms. We argue the term re-municipalization lacks conceptual
clarity, confusing municipal level reversals from national ones, new
service delivery from reversals, and mixed market positions from full
public control. This conceptual confusion makes measurement of
re-municipalization difficult. While more case studies are being
discovered, quantitative time series studies do not show remunicipalization is increasing. Much case study based research argues
remunicipalization is politically transformative, but quantitative
research generally finds re-municipalization to be part of a pragmatic market management process, a position confirmed by the
papers in this special issue
Competition and educational quality: evidence from the Netherlands
Little evidence is available for the effect of competition on educational quality as only a few countries allow large-scale competition. In the Netherlands, free parental choice has been present since the beginning of the twentieth century and can be characterized as a full voucher program with 100 % funding. Based on micro panel data for the Netherlands, we show that there is a relation between competition and educational outcomes in secondary education, but that it is often negative and small, sometimes insignificant but never positive. This effect is larger for small and medium-sized schools and for schools that do not have a Protestant or Catholic denomination
Recommended from our members
Spatial co-occurrence of firearm homicides and opioid overdose deaths in Chicago by level of COVID-19 mortality, 2017–2021
Background
Firearm homicide and opioid overdoses were already leading causes of death in the U.S. before both problems surged during the COVID-19 pandemic. Firearm violence, overdoses, and COVID-19 have all disproportionately harmed communities that are socially and economically marginalized, but the co-occurrence of these problems in the same communities has received little attention. To describe the co-occurrence of firearm homicides and opioid overdose deaths with COVID-19 mortality we used 2017–2021 medical examiner’s data from Chicago, IL. Deaths were assigned to zip codes based on decedents’ residence. We stratified zip codes into quartiles by COVID-19 mortality rate, then compared firearm homicide and fatal opioid overdose rates by COVID-19 quartile.
Findings
Throughout the study period, firearm homicide and opioid overdose rates were highest in the highest COVID-19 mortality quartile and lowest in the lowest COVID-19 mortality quartile. Increases in firearm homicide and opioid overdose were observed across all COVID-19 mortality quartiles.
Conclusions
High co-occurrence of these deaths at the community level call for addressing the systemic forces which made them most vulnerable before the pandemic. Such strategies should consider the environments where people reside, not only where fatal injuries occur
Collusion in the Dutch waste collection market
In this paper we analyse whether collusion exists in the Dutch waste collection market, which shows a high degree of concentration. Although scale effects might be in accordance with this market outcome, the question is whether this concentration is in fact a result of fair competition. Using data for (nearly) all Dutch municipalities we estimate whether collusion exists and what the impact is on tariffs for waste collection. The results indicate that high concentration increases prices and therefore (partly) offsets the advantage of contracting out. The presence of competing public firms might be essential to ensure more and fair competition.Waste collection, collusion, public-private firms, contracting out
Subthreshold PTSD and PTSD in a prospective‐longitudinal cohort of military personnel: Potential targets for preventive interventions
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146501/1/da22819_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146501/2/da22819.pd
- …
