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This book offers a critical examination of the collaborative turn unfolding across the Nordic welfare states. Focusing on co-production partnerships between citizens, public authorities, and civil society the volume explores how this approach is reshaping policies, institutional arrangements, and the role of civil society in Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Denmark.
While co-production is increasingly promoted as a solution to persistent challenges such as policy complexity, democratic deficits, and fiscal pressures the Nordic experience reveals important variations in its scope, forms, and
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Produktbeschreibung
This book offers a critical examination of the collaborative turn unfolding across the Nordic welfare states. Focusing on co-production partnerships between citizens, public authorities, and civil society the volume explores how this approach is reshaping policies, institutional arrangements, and the role of civil society in Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Denmark.

While co-production is increasingly promoted as a solution to persistent challenges such as policy complexity, democratic deficits, and fiscal pressures the Nordic experience reveals important variations in its scope, forms, and implications. Is this shift a genuine transformation of the welfare state, or an adaptive strategy cloaked in collaborative rhetoric? Drawing on comparative perspectives, the book highlights how Nordic traditions of universalism, egalitarianism, and strong public institutions create distinct conditions for collaboration conditions that differ markedly from those in liberal or residual welfare regimes where co-production theories have largely been developed. In doing so, it challenges dominant frameworks and argues for a reconceptualization of co-production through a Nordic perspective.

Aimed at scholars, policymakers, and practitioners, this volume offers a significant contribution to welfare state and civil society research and invites reflection on the promises and limits of collaborative governance in times of change.
Autorenporträt
Linda Lundgaard Andersen is Professor at the Department of People and Technology at Roskilde University, Denmark. Bernard Enjolras is Director in the Center for the research on civil society and voluntary sector and Research Professor at the Institute for Social Research (ISF), Oslo, Norway. Ari Nieminen is Senior Lecturer at Diaconia University of Applied Sciences, Finland. Johan Vamstad is Associate Professor at the Center for Civil Society Research, Marie Cederschiöld University, Sweden.